Toronto Star

Business owners gird for vaccine passport backlash

Provincial system begins Wednesday, though official app is still weeks away

- ROSA SABA BUSINESS REPORTER

Business owners are nervously awaiting the implementa­tion of Ontario’s vaccine certificat­ion system, steeling themselves for logistical difficulti­es, extra costs and potential altercatio­ns with customers.

The vaccine certificat­ion system will come into effect Wednesday, although the province’s planned app won’t be in action for another month. Customers going to a gym, restaurant and a number of other non-essential venues will be required to show proof of vaccinatio­n — and proof they received their second dose at least 14 days earlier — on paper or on their phone, or provide an exemption document written by a doctor or registered nurse.

The mandate will be harder to implement for some businesses than others, depending on the number of customers they see daily.

Victoria Wickett, co-owner of Bomb Fitness, said it will be easier for clientbase­d businesses like hers to deal with the vaccine certificat­ion mandate than restaurant­s, for example, which deal with a much higher volume of people.

But navigating the vaccine certificat­ion system is “still a huge expense,” said Wickett.

She thinks the government should have waited until the app was ready before implementi­ng the vaccine mandate.

“It’s a lot on our plate to ask for this,” she said. “It would have been nice if it was made a little bit easier.

Ontario is building its own app inhouse, an approach that has garnered some criticism.

For the restaurant industry, the vaccine certificat­ion system is creating a

lot of stress before it has even begun. The policy applies to all restaurant­s, bars and clubs, with the exception of outdoor patio areas, takeout and delivery.

James Rilett, vice-president of Central Canada for Restaurant­s Canada, said there are a lot of unknowns for Ontario restaurate­urs as Wednesday draws closer.

“It’s just making people nervous,” he said, adding that restaurant­s are already getting backlash from people making reservatio­ns for later in the week, and are nervous about the online and in-person conflict they and their staff may have to deal with.

Business owners are “pulling their hair out,” said Rilett.

Not only will verifying the vaccine certificat­es be logistical­ly difficult, restaurant owners are even more concerned about verifying exemptions. Rilett is convinced staff will encounter both fake vaccine certificat­es and fake exemption notes.

Larry Isaacs, president of the Firkin Group of Pubs, doesn’t understand why the government didn’t wait until an app was available instead of making businesses manually check customers’ proof of vaccinatio­n or exemption notes. “We are not equipped to handle doctor’s notes,” said Isaacs. “This is ridiculous. … How are we supposed to determine if your doctor’s note is valid or (a) fraud?”

Isaacs said his staff are already dealing with frustrated and angry customers.

Julie Kwiecinski, director of provincial affairs for Ontario at the Canadian Federation of Independen­t Business, said business owners are concerned about the safety of their employees and themselves.

“Many of them feel like the government is downloadin­g the responsibi­lity of ensuring people are vaccinated to businesses,” she said.

Kwiecinski said simple government guidance, such as a “triage” sheet outlining how to deal with escalating customer situations, would go a long way to helping businesses and their employees deal with the unknowns to come.

She said many business owners are concerned about incurring fines — both individual­s and businesses can be fined for not complying with the rules — and she worries that some businesses could get in trouble by accident, such as if they fail to spot a fake vaccine exemption.

Some business owners are hiring security staff to take care of the checking for them, said Rilett, so that restaurant staff aren’t on the front lines.

Kwiecinski said businesses need clearer rules to avoid confusion, unnecessar­y fines and red tape as the vaccine certificat­ion system is put in place.

Businesses with repeat clients, such as gyms or fitness studios, should be permitted to check a client’s vaccine certificat­ion just once, rather than each time they enter, Kwiecinski said.

While the regulation­s don’t clearly address this issue, a Ministry of Health questions and answers document responding to this issue states that patrons must provide proof at point of entry, and that businesses can’t retain any informatio­n, including vaccinatio­n details provided by the patron.

Rilett said the province’s app, scheduled to be implemente­d in another month, sounds like an easier and more secure way to go about vaccine certificat­ion. He thinks the government should have adopted another province’s app instead of making its own.

Wickett said she’s not against mandating vaccines, but said the rollout in Ontario is “not ideal.”

“I think it does add a level of reassuranc­e for our members, so I don’t see it as a bad thing,” she said. “But … the implementa­tion of it is difficult.”

 ?? STEVE RUSSELL TORONTO STAR ?? Victoria Wickett, co-owner of Bomb Fitness, isn’t opposed to the province’s vaccine certificat­ion system, but says the rollout is “not ideal” and may be difficult to implement for businesses that see a large number of customers daily.
STEVE RUSSELL TORONTO STAR Victoria Wickett, co-owner of Bomb Fitness, isn’t opposed to the province’s vaccine certificat­ion system, but says the rollout is “not ideal” and may be difficult to implement for businesses that see a large number of customers daily.
 ?? STEVE RUSSELL TORONTO STAR ?? Bomb Fitness co-owner Victoria Wickett thinks the province should have had its app ready before implementi­ng the mandate.
STEVE RUSSELL TORONTO STAR Bomb Fitness co-owner Victoria Wickett thinks the province should have had its app ready before implementi­ng the mandate.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada