The Hamilton Spectator

Ontario preparing to lift most mask mandates on March 21

Remaining public health orders expected to end by April 27

- ALLISON JONES AND HOLLY MCKENZIE-SUTTER

Ontario is removing most mask mandates on March 21, including in schools, and is ending all remaining public health orders a month later, shifting the onus of protection from COVID-19 to individual­s.

Improving health indicators, such as a stable COVID-19 test positivity rate and declining hospitaliz­ations, as well as Ontario’s high vaccinatio­n rates and the availabili­ty of antiviral treatments, allow for these steps, the chief medical officer of health said Wednesday.

“You have to recognize you can’t mandate masking forever, that it has to be eventually an individual choice based on an individual’s risk assessment,” Dr. Kieran Moore said. “We’re at that point by March 21st, that we’re asking Ontarians to do an individual assessment, acknowledg­ing that the risk remains, but that we’re well over the peak of activity across Ontario and we have to learn to live with this virus.”

The announceme­nt comes as 1,974 new COVID-19 cases were reported Wednesday, though Moore has said that limits on testing mean that the true number is likely 10 times that amount, or more than 19,000 cases.

Moore said masking requiremen­ts may need to return if a new variant emerges. In the meantime, he encouraged people to be kind to those who choose to continue wearing masks and said he would personally keep wearing one in a mall or busy big-box store. Moore also “strongly recommende­d” people who are vulnerable to keep masking.

Ottawa Public Health noted in a tweet that wearing masks helps protect others, such as those who are immunocomp­romised or are older.

“Your mask protects them,” the health unit wrote. “Thanks for wearing it.”

Premier Doug Ford said at an unrelated announceme­nt Wednesday that the world has learned a lot since March 2020 and Ontario is in much better shape now.

“We’re going to move forward cautiously, and if someone wants to keep (a mask) on, God bless them, and good for them,” he said in Brantford, Ont. “But I know a lot of people don’t want to keep them on.”

The next step in Ontario’s reopening will come on March 14, when mandatory vaccinate-or-test policies end for workers in schools, child-care settings, hospitals and long-term care.

The long-term care ministry had been set to mandate booster doses for staff on that date.

Individual organizati­ons will have the authority to keep their own requiremen­ts in place, and most hospitals have said they will continue their strict vaccine mandates.

A coalition of children’s hospitals, including Toronto’s SickKids and CHEO in Ottawa, had urged the province to keep masks in schools for at least two weeks after March break, saying that public health measures are what have kept schools open.

“We encourage everyone to continue masking in schools, if they are able,” the hospitals wrote Wednesday. “We all want the pandemic to be a memory for our kids, not part of their day-to-day. But we’re not quite there yet.”

The president of the Elementary Teachers’ Federation of Ontario expressed concern that lifting mask mandates in schools so soon would lead to another disruption to inperson learning and that the move is politicall­y driven.

Moore said his decisions and recommenda­tions to government are based on science and “have not been affected by any understand­ing of the political system.”

In addition to masking, other measures in schools, such as cohorting and daily on-site screening for symptoms will also end on March 21, as will all regulatory requiremen­ts for businesses, such as to do “passive” screening and have COVID-19 safety plans.

On April 27, all remaining mask rules will be lifted and remaining emergency orders and directives will be lifted or expire, except that officials say isolation requiremen­ts for those who’ve tested positive for COVID-19 or have symptoms are part of ongoing guidance.

 ?? NATHAN DENETTE THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Dr. Kieran Moore, Ontario’s chief medical officer of health, reads his notes as he holds a news conference regarding the lifting of most mask mandates for indoor settings.
NATHAN DENETTE THE CANADIAN PRESS Dr. Kieran Moore, Ontario’s chief medical officer of health, reads his notes as he holds a news conference regarding the lifting of most mask mandates for indoor settings.

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