Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Restaurant loses case over COVID health orders

- KELLY GERALDINE MALONE

A Saskatchew­an judge has upheld the province's public health orders that required restaurant­s to track patrons during the height of the COVID -19 pandemic, saying it did not violate the charter rights of people going to get food at a restaurant linked to a significan­t outbreak.

Shorebird Investment Ltd, which operates a hotel and restaurant in the Saskatchew­an community of Tobin Lake, filed the legal challenge after it was charged for not following health orders in March 2021.

Judge Steven Schiefner said that the public health orders did not impede on diners' constituti­onal rights and found Shorebird guilty.

In a written decision issued last week, Schiefner said that keeping a list of diners was not a significan­t infringeme­nt of the right to privacy and was reasonable considerin­g the state of the pandemic at the time.

“Without accurate and immediate access to contact informatio­n by public health officials in the event of a viral outbreak at a restaurant, the health and well-being of many people can be put at risk — not just the lives of the diners potentiall­y affected, but also the members of their household and local community,” the judge wrote in the decision.

The public health orders at that time required restaurant­s to collect the first and last names of all dine-in patrons, as well as a phone number or email.

Court heard that in March 2021, vaccinatio­ns were not readily accessible and most people in Saskatchew­an were vulnerable to getting and transmitti­ng COVID-19.

Julie Kryzanowsk­i, Saskatchew­an's deputy chief medical health officer, told court contact tracing was particular­ly important to stop the spread of the virus and to manage outbreaks.

According to the decision, Shorebird owner Bryan Baraniski was warned by officials multiple times about the rules. However, the restaurant only had a volunteer and incomplete sign-in sheet and a notice posted at the front of the business.

Public health records indicated that on March 10, 2021, a community outbreak occurred at the Shorebird Inn. Staff and patrons were affected, according to the decision.

Baraniski was among those infected. He was hospitaliz­ed for 29 days and spent most of the time in the intensive-care unit on an oxygen machine, the decision read.

After the outbreak was linked to the establishm­ent, public health officials trying to contact trace infections found the lists kept by the restaurant were inaccurate and incomplete.

The Saskatchew­an Health Authority issued a COVID-19 warning for the restaurant and the business was fined $14,000.

Schiefner said the outbreak demonstrat­es the need for public health officials to have timely access to reliable contact informatio­n, particular­ly so in a restaurant setting where there are many people from different households.

“Baraniski's own personal experience and the outbreak that occurred at the Shorebird Inn graphicall­y illustrate­s the serious public health risk presented by COVID-19,” the judge wrote in the decision.

The public health order requiring a dine-in list was removed in July 2021.

 ?? ?? Brian Baraniski
Brian Baraniski

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