The Hamilton Spectator

City cancels conference­s to protect its employees

Police identify ‘essential’ staff to brace for virus

- TEVIAH MORO tmoro@thespec.com 905-526-3264 | @TeviahMoro

The city has cancelled all nonessenti­al training sessions and conference­s for its 8,000 employees as it scales up efforts to prevent the spread of coronaviru­s in Hamilton.

The in-person events are suspended until April 30 as staff meeting daily at the city’s emergency operations centre in the joint fire-EMS headquarte­rs on Stone Church Road East react to the changing pandemic landscape.

“We will continue to monitor and respond to this rapidly evolving situation to ensure we are providing the best support possible to the community as we work together to find our way through this challengin­g situation,” Mayor Fred Eisenberge­r said in a press release late Thursday.

The city’s emergency operations centre, which was activated at “Level 1” Wednesday in response to COVID-19, will move to “Level 2” protocols Friday, the city said.

The EOC is a collaborat­ion of police, EMS, fire and public health staff to focus and organize resources during big emergencie­s, including flooding, ice storms and pandemics.

The city also noted staff are examining the effects of school closures announced earlier Thursday. Staff are also “reviewing all city-hosted public meetings, events and gatherings.”

Hamilton’s first case — a 32year-old Juravinski Cancer Centre oncologist who lives in

Burlington and travelled to Hawaii — was announced Wednesday.

On Thursday, health officials said two more area residents tested positive: a 52-year-old Hamilton man and an Oakville woman in her 40s. Both had travelled to the United States.

The risk to the average Hamiltonia­n “remains low,” Dr. Bart Harvey, the city’s associate medical officer of health, said during a news conference early Thursday afternoon.

So far, Hamilton’s cases have been related to travel, he said. Cause for greater concern would be “free community spread,” which is the case elsewhere. “We’re not there yet.”

Harvey emphasized that people who aren’t displaying symptoms won’t be tested for the virus in hospital emergency rooms. “We just don’t have that many test kits to go around.”

On Thursday, the province announced an initial wave of dedicated COVID-19 assessment centres are to soon open at hospitals in the GTA and Ottawa.

“I would anticipate that in the next few days we will have additional assessment sites,” Harvey said, noting the local healthcare sector’s proposal requires provincial sign-off.

In addition to its regular infectious disease team, 57 more public health staff have joined the effort to contain COVID-19, Harvey said. Meanwhile, Hamilton police is working on a contingenc­y plan to prioritize essential staff in case officers start to fall ill with the virus.

“We are identifyin­g our essential staff as well as our non-essential, and how will they will complement each other in work that needs to be done,” deputy chief Ryan Diodati said Thursday.

Essential staff are front-line officers who respond to calls, he said. Non-essential staff could be employees that service the fleet, for instance.

But non-essential staff still enable essential staff to do their job, Diodati said, noting cruisers are needed for calls.

Best practices for pandemics is to plan for a potential 25 to 30 per cent reduction in the workforce, he said. “Again, we haven’t seen any reductions in our workforce. It’s business as usual right now.”

To report symptoms or ask for guidance, call the city’s COVID-19 hotline at 905-5462424, ext. 7970. Email questions to phscovid19@hamilton.ca.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada