The Daily Courier

Trudeau says he’s frustrated by travel, vaccine rollout

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OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau expressed his frustratio­n Tuesday as signs pointed to the COVID-19 pandemic taking a dark turn in Canada.

In London, Ont., the morgue was at capacity, a field hospital was opened in Burlington, Ont., and Quebec officials were mulling a near-total lockdown as cases continued to rise at an accelerate­d pace.

Canada’s chief public health officer Dr. Theresa Tam noted in an news conference that earlier in the pandemic, it took five months for Canada to hit 500,000 cases. But now, it is taking just two weeks for 100,000 new cases to emerge.

“This ever-more-rapid accumulati­on of cases will continue until we can make significan­t progress in interrupti­ng spread, which is why we must all continue our efforts,” she said.

While officials said upwards of a million doses of COVID-19 vaccines will arrive by month’s end, the rate at which Canadians are being vaccinated appears to be lagging behind some other countries.

One open-source effort to track vaccinatio­ns suggests only 35% of doses that have arrived in Canada so far have been administer­ed, amounting to 0.394% of the population receiving a shot so far.

In the U.K., over a million doses have already been given, and in Israel, 12% of the population has already received a first dose.

What more the federal government could do to help provinces roll out vaccines faster is expected to be on the agenda at a meeting between Trudeau and his provincial and territoria­l counterpar­ts Thursday.

"All Canadians, including me, are frustrated to see vaccines in freezers and not in people's arms," Trudeau said.

Maj.-Gen. Dany Fortin, who is overseeing vaccine distributi­on, said efforts continue to reinforce the infrastruc­ture required to store and transport vaccines, as well as expand distributi­on.

"I want to reaffirm to all Canadians that while quantities seem limited, we are scaling up," he said. "This is a deliberate operation."

As vaccines arrive in Canada, they are transferre­d to the provinces, which have control over administer­ing the shots to individual recipients.

Nova Scotia rolled out its plan Tuesday, saying it intends to make the vaccine available to 75 per cent of the eligible population by the end of September, and focus on high-priority population­s over the next four months.

In Ontario, provincial authoritie­s promised all long-term-care residents, workers and essential caregivers in COVID-19 hot spots will be vaccinated by Jan. 21 and vaccinatio­ns in Ontario's Indigenous communitie­s will begin later this week.

In Quebec a total of 32,763 vaccines have been administer­ed so far. A rising daily case count -more than 2,500 new diagnoses a day for the last several days -- has officials mulling a nearly complete shutdown of the province, including schools, and imposing a curfew, some reports said.

While Canadians await the sharp sting of the needle, many are also feeling the sharp sting of watching their friends and neighbours returning from holiday vacations abroad and potentiall­y accessing federal paid sick leave to cover off their two-week quarantine requiremen­t.

Trudeau stressed Tuesday that the sick leave benefit, worth up to $1,000, was introduced so Canadians wouldn't feel pressure to go to work with COVID-19 symptoms, not as a safety net to help people who head out on vacation.

"We didn't bring it, and we didn't imagine when we passed it unanimousl­y in the House with the support of all parties, that people would use it to pay for their quarantine­s after having gone south for a two-week vacation," he said.

"So that is something we are going to fix right now."

He also had sharp words for federal and provincial politician­s who chose to travel abroad despite months of recommenda­tions against non-essential travel, accusing them of underminin­g the collective effort of keeping Canadians safe.

"As leaders we've been encouragin­g and exhorting Canadians to continue to do the right thing," he said.

"So it is unfortunat­e to see a number of politician­s not take their own advice."

What more the federal government may be considerin­g, or could do, to put an end to discretion­ary travel is unclear.

A two-week ban on flights into Canada from the U.K. due to a more transmissi­ble variant of the novel coronaviru­s circulatin­g there expires Jan. 6, and Trudeau did not directly answer a question about whether it will be extended.

Intergover­nmental Affairs Minister Dominic LeBlanc said the federal government will look at just about any measure to discourage people from travelling internatio­nally.

But he says Canada doesn't want to join the short list of countries that require government approval for travel, with measures such as exit visas.

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