The Hamilton Spectator

Legault accepts some responsibi­lity for situation in Montreal

- GIUSEPPE VALIANTE AND SIDHARTHA BANERJEE

MONTREAL—For the first time since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, Quebec Premier François Legault visited Montreal on Thursday, to announce the province recorded 131 new deaths linked to the virus — 91 of them in the hard-hit city.

Montreal — the epicentre of the COVID-19 contagion in Canada and Legault’s hometown — is still so “fragile,” the premier said, that he had little choice but to cancel the rest of the school year for elementary students in the area.

Legault took some responsibi­lity for the repeated failures to bring the contagion in Montreal under control, especially within the city’s long-term-care homes, where the majority of the province’s deaths have occurred. But it’s Quebecers as a whole, he said, who have let this happen to Montreal.

“I think the society failed,” he told reporters.

There are three times more seniors in long-term-care homes in Quebec, per capita, “than anywhere else in the world,” Legault said. Those centres were underfunde­d and understaff­ed for years, he continued, and the people who worked there were underpaid.

Hundreds of members of the Canadian Armed Forces have now been dispatched to the province’s long-term-care homes to help feed and care for the residents.

Daycares in the greater Montreal area, which had a tentative reopening date of May 25, now have to remain closed until at least June 1, the premier said. Authoritie­s still haven’t made a firm decision about whether or not to push back the May 25 reopening date set for retail businesses in the city.

“We will still give ourselves a few days to take a decision on retail businesses,” Legault said. “A crucial element that would help us to reopen is for the majority of people to wear a mask in public.”

But Legault didn’t come to his hometown bearing only bad news.

The number of people hospitaliz­ed in the province diminished by 42 compared with the day prior — the biggest drop since the beginning of the crisis. Quebec now has 1,834 people in hospital with COVID-19. The number of people in intensive care also came down over the same period, to 190 people, a reduction of four.

Legault said the province is also close to the goal he set last week of administer­ing 14,000 tests per day. He said the province conducted 13,291 tests on May 12.

Dr. Horacio Arruda, Quebec’s director of public health, said when the data comes in for the number of tests administer­ed on May 13, “I expect us to go over or hit the number that we set.”

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