The Standard (St. Catharines)

Ford cancels return to classrooms

Students to move to online after break; hospitals shutter pediatric units

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TORONTO — Ontario schools will move indefinite­ly to online learning when classes resume next week after spring break, the province announced Monday.

Premier Doug Ford said community spread of COVID-19 is too high to risk having students congregate after the break.

He argued that schools are safe but said the province must “do everything possible” to bring infections down during the “critical” next few weeks.

“We simply can’t be too cautious right now, we have to be proactive,” Ford said Monday. “When it comes to keeping our kids safe I will never take unnecessar­y risk.”

He said the government will decide based on COVID-19 data when in-person classes can resume.

Education Minister Stephen Lecce said boards will be directed to support in-person special education instructio­n for students who can’t learn remotely.

He said child care for nonschool aged children, and for children of front-line workers, will continue during the closure.

Lecce said the closure of inperson learning is a “sadly necessary precaution” as the province battles a third wave of infections that is straining intensive care units.

Meanwhile, the province said Monday it would add hundreds of critical care beds this week, free up pediatric units for adult patients and hire nursing students to help deal with an influx of COVID-19 cases that is pushing the health-care system to the brink.

Health Minister Christine Elliott said the government is exploring a number of different options to boost hospital capacity and staffing levels as variants of concern wreak havoc on the province.

“The hospitals have been instructed to ramp down all surgeries except the ones that are absolutely life and death matters,” she told a news conference.

The cancellati­on of elective surgeries, which will allow hospitals to treat more COVID-19 patients, is “unfortunat­e, but sadly necessary right now,” Elliott said in the legislatur­e.

The province reported 4,401 new cases of COVID-19 on Monday — more than 1,280 in Toronto — and 15 new deaths due to the virus. The number of COVID-19 patients in intensive care units jumped to 612 — setting another new high.

Patient transfers were also on the rise and all hospitals in the Greater Toronto Area had to shut down pediatric units to accommodat­e patients with COVID-19.

Elliott said the province is looking at new ways to bolster staffing, including allowing student nurses to take jobs in hospitals so that more experience­d nurses can be moved to critical care wards.

The province said the various measures will eventually help create between 700 and 1,000 ICU beds to treat the rising number of patients.

“We are creating capacity and we are making sure that every Ontarian who needs an intensive care bed will get one,” Elliott said.

The Ontario Hospital Associatio­n said all 14 hospitals in the GTA will send their pediatric patients to Toronto’s Hospital for Sick Children, which has also opened eight of its intensive care beds to young adults with the virus. Sickkids said it expected to have all of those beds occupied by the end of day Monday.

Associatio­n CEO Anthony Dale said hospitals across Ontario are experienci­ng a capacity crunch unlike anything they’ve ever seen during the pandemic.

“We are in a true crisis and this is the battle of a lifetime,” Dale said in an interview Monday. “This virus has got Ontario under attack. We’re under siege in terms of community spread.”

Dale said one way to offer relief to hospitals is to speed up the transferri­ng of patients who are currently waiting for a nursing home bed — a safe move now that nearly all of the longterm care residents have been vaccinated.

“This is a very important discussion and very sensitive one,” he said. “All we’re saying is if it can be done safely ... let’s think about that as an option because the situation in hospital is quite serious.”

Ornge, the province’s air ambulance service, said the number of patient transfers has increased since the start of April.

 ?? NATHAN DENETTE
THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? A pedestrian walks past a mural designed by artist Emily May Rose on Monday. In a bid to limit the spread of COVID-19, Ontario will keep kids at home after spring break.
NATHAN DENETTE THE CANADIAN PRESS A pedestrian walks past a mural designed by artist Emily May Rose on Monday. In a bid to limit the spread of COVID-19, Ontario will keep kids at home after spring break.

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