The Hamilton Spectator

Calgary COVID situation ‘unbelievab­ly bad’

City asks province to reinstate public health enforcemen­t powers

- LAUREN KRUGEL

CALGARY — The City of Calgary wants the provincial government to reinstate public health enforcemen­t powers and “massively” boost contact tracing as it deals with what its mayor describes as a dire COVID-19 situation.

“Things are unbelievab­ly bad,” Naheed Nenshi said Friday, when the province announced 907 new infections.

“They are much worse than they’ve been at any point during the pandemic and we’re going in the wrong direction.”

There are more than 3,550 active cases in the Calgary zone, including 78 people in hospital and 13 in intensive care. The province as a whole has 8,593 active cases.

Nenshi made his remarks a day after Alberta Premier Jason Kenney introduced new restrictio­ns for hard-hit areas, including a two-week ban on indoor sports and fitness classes and earlier closing times for restaurant­s, bars and pubs.

Kenney said his government is also “strongly recommendi­ng” there be no gatherings in homes and warned it may have to step in with fines if citizens don’t fall in line.

Calgary Emergency Management Agency Chief Tom Sampson said time will tell whether the province’s latest restrictio­ns go far enough. “I’m a real proponent of a short, sharp, hard break,” he said. “And that includes probably more things than we’ve seen currently in this break that’s been called.”

Sampson said a letter has been drafted to the province asking that city peace officers be given the power to enforce public health orders. They had been granted that authority at the beginning of the pandemic, but those measures lapsed in June along with the city’s state of emergency.

“I’m optimistic that our provincial government will provide that capacity,” Sampson said, adding he’d prefer citizens follow the rules and that the city not have to crack down.

The city has “essentiall­y zero” power to enforce the latest provincial restrictio­ns, Nenshi said. “I’ve got women and men out there with uniforms and ticket books who currently cannot write tickets and I think that if there are people who are egregiousl­y and flagrantly putting others at risk, they ought to get a ticket.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada