Peterborough Blogs
Ontario Government Releases Provincial Reopening Plan With Eased Outdoor Restrictions For Victoria Day Weekend
/The Government of Ontario has lifted outdoor activity restrictions for the Victoria Day weekend and a “road map to reopen” in a press conference at Queen’s Park held on Thursday.
Premier Doug Ford, Christine Elliott, Deputy Premier and Minister of Health and Dr. David Williams, Chief Medical Officer of Health were present to discuss the province’s reopening plan.
On Saturday, outdoor recreational amenities can reopen such as golf course and tennis courts to safely celebrate the Victoria Day long weekend said Elliott.
Outdoor gathering limits have been expanded to five people. The government urges the province to continue following health guidelines and get the COVID-19 vaccine.
The road map to reopen is the proposed way out of the pandemic and a clear path forward to carefully and safely reopen in a three-step plan according to Elliott.
Step one: Initial focus on resuming small-crowd outdoor activities including pools, splash pads, fitness classes, zoos and religious services. Retail stores can be open with restrictions.
Outdoor gatherings can be up to 10 people.
Outdoor dining up to four people per table.
Non-essential retail at 15 per cent capacity.
Step two: Further expands outdoor activities and continue limited indoor services with face coverings worn.
Outdoor gatherings of 25 people
Outdoors sports and leagues permitted
Non-essential retail open up at 25 per cent capacity
Public libraries and personal care services where face coverings can be worn and with capacity limits
Step three: Expand access to indoor settings with restrictions including large numbers of people and where face coverings cannot always be worn. This includes but not limited to gyms, cinemas, performing arts facilities, indoor dining and museums with capacity limits.
The province plans to be in step one around the week of June 14 and will be in each step for at least 21 days. The three weeks allow time to evaluate the impacts and determine if Ontario can move to the next step.
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Ontario Government Extends Shutdown For Another Two Weeks
/The shutdown has been extended for another two weeks until June 2 announced by Ontario Premier Doug Ford in a public address at Queen’s Park announced on Thursday.
The shutdown is to help combat the overflowing ICU numbers that remain in hospitals and to have “the most normal July and August possible.”
The stay-at-home-order started back on Apr. 3 has been extended by a full month since the original declaration. The shutdown was set to expire on May 20.
Ford was accompanied by Christine Elliott, Deputy Premier and Minister of Health, Solicitor General Sylvia Jones and Dr. David Williams, Chief Medical Officer of Health.
During the shutdown, daily cases have gone down from 4,000 to 2,750 but the goal is less than 1000 for several days before considering looser restrictions according to Williams.
“Everybody thinks that’s great from where we came from, and that’s true but we still have a ways to get back down because we didn’t get all the way out of the second before we went into the third wave,” explained Williams. “We do not want to repeat that again.”
Starting May 31, youth aged 12 to 17 and their family members who have not received a vaccine will be able to book an appointment for the Pfizer vaccine.
Publicly funded and private elementary and secondary schools will continue remote learning.
Sports and outdoor recreational activities will remain closed. Ford agrees that golfing is not the issue but it is the post-golfing gatherings that are a concern.
“There’s nothing wrong with golfing, the problem is the mobility,” he said. “Then after golf, they go back, they have a few pops. That’s the problem.”
As of Thursday, 6.6 million residents have had vaccinated with at least the first dose with over 407,000 receiving their second dose.
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Ontario Government Announces New Restrictions and Shutdown Extension
/Ontario Premier Doug Ford and his cabinet have placed tighter restrictions including a two-week shutdown extension to combat the third wave of COVID-19 announced on Friday.
The decision came after COVID-19 cases, hospitalizations and intensive care unit occupancies are at their highest according to Christine Elliott, deputy premier and minister of health.
The stay-at-home order now totalling six weeks will come with tighter restrictions and are effective April 17, at 12:01 a.m.
Limiting mobility, enforcing the rules and getting vaccines are the three ways the curve will be flattened according to Ford.
The following restrictions are as follows:
Outdoor gatherings are limited to your household only, those who live alone can meet with one other household
Provincial border restriction checkpoints are placed on Manitoba and Quebec with the exception of work, medical care or transportations
International and air travel are restricted
All non-essential workplaces and construction will be closed
All outdoor recreational activities such as golf courses, soccer fields, basketball courts and playgrounds are closed
Essential retailers permitted for in-store shopping are capped at a 25 per cent capacity
Religious services, weddings and funerals have a 10-person limit indoors or outdoors
Drive-in services are permitted
Police and by-law officers will enforce public health measures during the shutdown. Police can ask for your place of residence and why you are not there. You can receive a ticket of $750 for not complying as it is breaking the law according to Sylvia Jones, solicitor general.
Vaccine supplies will increase for hotspots by 25 per cent according to Ford.
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Ontario Premier Doug Ford Announced Four-Week Province-Wide "Emergency Brake"
/Ontario will go into at least a four-week, province-wide shutdown on Saturday as Ontario Premier Doug Ford announced an “emergency brake” to help reduce the spread of COVID-19 variants.
The announcement was made Thursday afternoon in a live stream at Queen’s Park in Toronto.
“This is a new pandemic,” said Ford. “We’re now fighting a new enemy. The new variants are far more dangerous than before. They spread faster and they do more harm than the virus we were fighting last year.”
The shutdown will take effect on Saturday, Apr. 3 at 12:01 a.m.
According to the Government of Ontario, they are urging Ontario to take these safety measures:
You should:
Stay home as much as possible
Limit close contact to your household (the people you live with) and stay at least two metres apart from everyone else
Limit trips outside your home to necessities, such as:
Getting food or medication
Going to medical appointments
Supporting vulnerable community members
Child care
Getting exercise or walking pets
Always:
Stay home if you have symptoms, even if they are mild
Stay two metres apart from people you don’t live with
Wear a mask or face covering in indoor public spaces or any time physical distancing is not possible
Christine Elliott, Deputy Premier and Minister of Health outlines the restrictions of the “emergency brake.”
Prohibiting indoor organized public events and social gatherings but outdoor gatherings are limited to a five-person maximum
Gatherings with the same household members or one-household gatherings can meet with one other solo household member
A 50 per cent capacity limit for, grocers, convenience stores, indoor farmers' markets, pharmacies and other stores that primarily sell food
A 25 per cent limit for all other retailers including big box stores
No personal care services.
No indoor or outdoor dining however take out, delivery and drive-thru options are permitted
No indoor or outdoor sports, sports facilities and recreational fitness, with very limited exceptions
Day camps are not permitted
Limiting capacity at funerals, weddings and religious services to 15 per cent occupancy per room indoors and to those who can social distance two metres outdoors. Social gatherings affiliated with these services such as receptions, which are not permitted indoors and are limited to five people outdoors are not included.