National Post (National Edition)

Ontario surpasses 5,000 deaths

Cabinet mulls new restrictio­ns, curfew excepted

- SHAWN JEFFORDS cases reported Monday.

TORONTO • New restrictio­ns to fight skyrocketi­ng rates of COVID-19 were being considered by Ontario's cabinet Monday night, although a curfew was not one of them.

The discussion took place as the province hit the grim milestone of recording more than 5,000 deaths from the virus since the start of the pandemic.

Premier Doug Ford said residents can expect an announceme­nt on new measures on Tuesday, when the province will also make new COVID-19 projection­s public.

“We worked all weekend ... right until late hours last night,” he said as he arrived at the legislatur­e ahead of Monday night’s cabinet meeting.

“We'll be going to cabinet with recommenda­tions.”

Ford did not elaborate on the recommenda­tions but has said the current provincial lockdown may need to be extended and stricter measures could be imposed if cases continue to soar.

Dr. Barbara Yaffe, Ontario's associate medical officer of health, said a curfew was not among the recommenda­tions going before cabinet, adding that she had seen no evidence one would be effective.

She noted, however, that current trends in the province were “scary” and said as many as a third of residents surveyed reported they are not following public health guidelines.

“The bottom line is people know what they should be doing,” she said. “It's a shame that we have to wait for government to force them into doing the right thing.”

The latest spike in cases can be attributed in part to people gathering over the holidays, growing outbreaks in long-term care and retirement homes, and workplace outbreaks, Yaffe said.

More must be done to help residents comply with public health rules, she said, including institutin­g paid sick days, bringing in eviction protection­s, and making isolation hotels available.

“It's not going to be an easy few weeks,” Yaffe said. “But what these trends demonstrat­e is that further actions are necessary.”

Officials in government and health-care have warned that surging cases are putting great strain on the health-care system.

Projection­s made public in late December showed that Ontario's ability to control the spread of COVID-19 was “precarious,” but tough lockdowns lasting a month or more could cut the number of daily cases significan­tly.

That data, released on Dec. 21, showed that if COVID-19 case rates continued to grow between one to three per cent, the province would have 3,000 to 5,000 daily cases by the end of January.

Ontario has recorded well over 3,000 cases daily for the last week, with 3,338 new

 ?? PETER J. THOMPSON / NATIONAL POST ?? Pedestrian­s wear masks near a bus shelter in Toronto on Monday. Ontario Premier Doug Ford says residents
can expect an announceme­nt Tuesday on new measures to stifle the COVID-19 throughout the province.
PETER J. THOMPSON / NATIONAL POST Pedestrian­s wear masks near a bus shelter in Toronto on Monday. Ontario Premier Doug Ford says residents can expect an announceme­nt Tuesday on new measures to stifle the COVID-19 throughout the province.

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