The Peterborough Examiner

Police to enforce stay-at-home order

Premier Ford warns health-care system is ‘on the brink of collapse’ as nurses associatio­n says new measures are ‘too little, too late’

- SHAWN JEFFORDS AND PAOLA LORIGGIO

TORONTO — Ontario ordered residents to stay home and declared a state of emergency on Tuesday as grim projection­s indicated soaring COVID -19 cases could overwhelm the health-care system in weeks.

The government also further delayed the return to in-person learning for schools in some hot spots and introduced several new restrictio­ns, although critics said not much had changed from measures already in place in the current provincial lockdown.

Premier Doug Ford said police would be enforcing the stay-athome order that takes effect Thursday and pleaded with residents to follow the rules.

“Now more than ever, we need, I need, you to do your part,” he said. “Stay at home, save lives, protect our healthcare system. The system is on the brink of collapse.”

Under the new order, Ontario residents will be required to

stay at home except for essential activities such as accessing health care or shopping for groceries. Outdoor exercise will be permitted.

The government has also restricted hours of operation for non-essential retailers currently offering delivery and curbside pick up to between 7 a.m. and 8 p.m., and a five-person cap on outdoor social gatherings.

Wearing a mask is also now recommende­d outdoors when physical distancing is difficult.

The 28-day state of emergency means police and bylaw officers will have the authority to enforce the rules, with the ability to issue tickets. Ford’s office said the legal parameters of the stay-at-home order will be published online Wednesday.

The government also said schools in five hot-spot regions

— Toronto, Hamilton, Peel, York and Windsor-Essex — will not reopen for in-person learning until Feb. 10. Ontario’s health minister left the door open to them remaining closed longer as well.

“School closures in southern Ontario are being extended ... and will be assessed on an ongoing basis by the chief medical officer of health,” Christine Elliott said. “Schools in hot spots

may not resume.”

The province said child care for non-school aged children will remain open.

NDP Leader Andrea Horwath said the measures announced aren’t dramatical­ly different than what the government has already been asking people to do for weeks. They also fail to implement key policies that

could help people stay at home, such as paid sick days, she said.

“This is an absolutely inadequate response that completely lacks urgency that the circumstan­ces demand,” she said.

The CEO of the Registered Nurses’ Associatio­n of Ontario said the new restrictio­ns are “too little, too late.” The associatio­n has called on the government to impose a full lockdown, similar to the measures taken last spring, as well as a curfew. Doris Grinspun said the government must also increase supports for vulnerable population­s because some people simply can’t afford to abide by a stay-at-home order.

“When you need to put food on the table you will do whatever you need to do,” Grinspun said.

The new restrictio­ns were announced shortly after the province released projection­s that show the virus is on track to overwhelm Ontario’s healthcare system. Dr. Adalsteinn Brown, one of the experts behind the projection­s, said that if the province’s COVID-19 positivity rate is at five per cent,

Ontario will see more than 20,000 new cases a day by the middle of next month.

If the rate climbs to seven per cent, that means the province will see 40,000 new daily cases.

The projection­s also indicate deaths from COVID-19 will exceed those in the pandemic’s first wave unless there is a significan­t reduction in contacts between residents.

They show that under current restrictio­ns, daily deaths from the virus will double from 50 to 100 between now and the end of February.

The data also shows a quarter of the province’s hospitals now have no intensive care unit beds free and another quarter have only one or two beds free.

Brown said health-care providers will face difficult choices in the weeks ahead.

“These are choices that no doctor ever wants to make, and no family ever wants to hear,” he said. “There will be choices about who will get the care they need and who will not.”

Projection­s show there could be about 500 COVID-19 patients in intensive care by midJanuary and potentiall­y more than 1,000 by February under more severe scenarios.

The projection­s also said 40 per cent of the province’s nursing homes are experienci­ng outbreaks of the virus.

Deaths continue to spike in long-term care with 198 residents and two staff dying of the virus since Jan. 1.

Ontario reported 2,903 new cases of COVID-19 on Tuesday, including eight new cases of a variant from the United Kingdom. The province also reported 41 more deaths linked to the virus.

Toronto Mayor John Tory said he was in favour of Ontario’s stricter measures, pointing to the “dire” case projection­s.

“The need for us to take further action that is meaningful and that is comprehens­ive is very real,” he said.

Meanwhile, the president of the Canadian Federation of Independen­t Business expressed disappoint­ment in the new limited hours for small retailers.

“Walmart, Costco and Amazon can continue to sell nonessenti­al goods in-store or deliver them to Ontarians with no additional changes, but small retailers will not be allowed to hand a product to a customer outdoors or even deliver one after 8 p.m.,” Dan Kelly said in a statement.

 ?? CLIFFORD SKARSTEDT EXAMINER ?? Mitchell Parker walks past a sign thanking front-line workers on George Street on Tuesday. Premier Doug Ford has declared another state of emergency and issued a 28-day “stay-at-home order” that takes effect on Thursday at 12:01 a.m.
CLIFFORD SKARSTEDT EXAMINER Mitchell Parker walks past a sign thanking front-line workers on George Street on Tuesday. Premier Doug Ford has declared another state of emergency and issued a 28-day “stay-at-home order” that takes effect on Thursday at 12:01 a.m.

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