Toronto Star

Premier expected to introduce ‘tough’ measures in Toronto and Peel that could last until Christmas

- ROB FERGUSON AND ROBERT BENZIE

Premier Doug Ford is considerin­g shuttering gyms and personal care services like barbers and salons, and limiting the number of shoppers allowed in malls and stores for 28 days to fight runaway COVID-19 in Toronto and Peel Region, the Star has learned.

Those restrictio­ns — as well as a ban on house cleaners travelling from home to home — were under serious considerat­ion as Ford’s cabinet met into the night Thursday, with ministers to finalize the decisions Friday.

New powers to enforce restrictio­ns with fines were also on the table to give authoritie­s “a bit more teeth” to penalize scofflaws in violation of pandemic precaution­s, a senior government source said.

Most of the measures are expected to take effect Monday and last until a week before Christmas, in a bid to get high case numbers under control.

However, there are no plans for an overnight curfew or travel bans, as have

een seen in some other jurisdicti­ons.

“We have some difficult but necessary decisions to make,” Ford said Thursday as the province reported hospital intensive care units were handling 150 COVID-19 patients, the level at which non-emergency surgeries were expected to be curtailed. “I’m asking the people of Ontario to listen, especially with the holidays quickly approachin­g.”

Curbside pickups at retail stores, which were the norm last spring, could make a return at stores facing capacity limits for shoppers. That measure could bring a return of lineups at grocery stores amid concerns that some have been overcrowde­d and could be fuelling the spread of the virus.

Two highly placed sources told the Star that a list of requests from Toronto’s chief medical officer was the blueprint for the restrictio­ns being contemplat­ed.

Dr. Eileen de Villa has pushed for a hard cap on the number of guests at weddings, limiting trips outside the home to essential activities, and time off for workers to get tested for the highly contagious virus among the measures that should apply to the entire Greater Toronto Area, not just to the hot zones of Toronto, Peel Region and York Region.

Those three areas are now in the red or “control” category of restrictio­ns, one short of the lockdown stage, along with Halton

Region and Hamilton.

York Region took to Twitter on Thursday night, saying it has sent a letter to Ford asking that it not be pushed into lockdown while it waits to see if existing red zone restrictio­ns can reduce COVID-19 case numbers.

Ford first said a week ago that Ontario was “staring down the barrel of another lockdown,” and warned Thursday that stringent restrictio­ns can be expected.

“These measures, they will have to be tough in the hardesthit areas,” he told a news conference. “We’re seeing concerning trends. Our hospital ICUs are in jeopardy, our long-termcare homes are at risk.”

The premier is facing familiar criticisms that he took too long to act once again after a string of record highs in new cases all last week, when computer modelling revealed a grim new forecast.

Provincial health officials warned daily new cases could hit 6,500 by mid-December and admissions to intensivec­are units could top 350 patients, making non-emergency surgeries virtually impossible.

Ontario reported 1,210 new cases on Thursday, down from the all-time high of 1,581 on Saturday, but the seven-day average remains near the record and 10 more ICU patients were put on ventilator­s, an unusually large jump.

“They wait until there’s a crisis and then they react,” said NDP Leader Andrea Horwath said Thursday, echoing concerns from doctors and epidemiolo­gists after a string of record high case levels and a sharp rise in deaths this month.

Hospitaliz­ations are up 22 per cent in the last week, and the number of ICU patients is up 49 per cent.

“Clearly a major pivot is necessary to protect our healthcare systems and save lives,” said Dr. Isaac Bogoch, an infectious diseases specialist at the University Health Network.

Health Minister Christine Elliott told reporters the government is bringing more hospital beds into service, and working on regional solutions to surgeries facing cancellati­on so hospitals without as many COVID -19 patients can take them on.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada