National Post (National Edition)

What will be open and not in Ontario

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Ontario is entering a lockdown starting on Saturday. Restrictio­ns will remain in place for southern Ontario until Jan. 23, but will lift for northern Ontario on Jan. 9. Here are some of the measures that will be in place:

STORES AND RESTAURANT­S

Restaurant­s can only provide take-out, drive thru, and delivery, including the sale of alcohol.

Supermarke­ts, convenienc­e stores, indoor farmer's markets and other stores that primarily sell food may stay open for in-person shopping with physical distancing and 50-per-cent capacity.

Pharmacies are open for in-person sales with physical distancing and a 50-per-cent capacity limit.

Discount and big box retailers that sell groceries may remain open if the store does not exceed 25-per-cent capacity.

Shopping malls must close for in-person retail, with the public only allowed to enter if it's to access businesses and organizati­ons permitted to be open (e.g., pharmacy, dentist).

Liquor stores may open if the store does not exceed 25-per-cent capacity of rooms open to the public.

SCHOOLS AND CHILD-CARE

Children at public elementary and secondary schools will participat­e in remote learning Jan. 4 to Jan. 8.

In northern Ontario public and private schools will be permitted to resume in-person instructio­n on Jan. 11.

Elementary schools in southern Ontario will reopen on Jan. 11. Secondary school students in southern Ontario will continue remote learning until Jan. 25.

Child-care centres will remain open for the duration of the provincewi­de shutdown period. However, during the period where elementary schools are operating virtually, licensed child care centres will be prohibited from serving schoolaged children.

GATHERINGS

No indoor social gatherings, except with members of the same household (the people you live with). Individual­s who live alone and single parents may consider having exclusive, close contact with another household to help reduce the negative impacts of social isolation.

Weddings, funerals and other religious rites, ceremonies and services can go ahead with a maximum of 10 people — indoors or outdoors — and only with physical distancing in place.

SPORTS AND RECREATION

Indoor recreation facilities must close, including indoor courts, pools and rinks.

Indoor sports must stop, except for “high performanc­e” and profession­al leagues such as the NHL or MLS.

Community centres can open only for permitted services such as child care.

Casinos, bingo halls and gaming establishm­ents must close.

Cinemas — with the exception of drive-in theatres — must close.

PERSONAL CARE

Personal care services such as hair salons and spas must close.

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