ontario lockdown

Mississauga mayor thinks another stay-at-home order is on the way for Ontario

Mississauga mayor Bonnie Crombie, who just days ago was asking that her citybe allowed to progress into the red zone without the rest of Peel Region, is now fearing that rising COVID-19 case numbers will spell out another stay-at-home order for Mississauga, neighbouring Brampton and potentially the rest of the province.

Crombie feels as if the order would likely be region-wide,she told insauga.com, but that it could also be like the widespread shutdown we sawimplemented for all of Ontario on Boxing Day.

"We see regions moving in the wrong direction," she told the news outlet, referencing the fact that a number have had to move from more open coloured zones into more prohibitive ones lately, and that some have eventhe emergency brake pulled. "It is something they are watching very closely, it could happen."

Crombie's worries are that Peel, which is already inthe grey zonewith an amendment allowingpatio dining, would be put back under something even more locked down than grey, like the provincial shutdown it just emerged from on March 8, which includeda formal stay-at-home orderfrom Premier Doug Ford.

它was on March 10 that Crombie said in a presser "we've done a great job here in Mississauga, keeping the numbers down, keeping on top of the guidelines and taking the advice of public health. I think we deserve to open in red."

She now says the thought of having to be locked down further when her city was so close to the red zone — in which gyms, salons, indoor dining, and other business operations can reopen — is "oppressing."

Meanwhile, the region's Medical Officer of Healthhas expressed concernover infection rates amid the third wave, and has indicated that things are pretty touch and go, with numbers being assessed on a day-by-day basis to determine whether further measures should be implemented.

The most recent data from the province shows a new daily case count of 309 in Peel on March 23, compared to 253 one week prior. Incidence rate per 100,000 people in the highest in Peel than any region in the province, and has slowly risen from 4,025.8 on March 16 to 4,164.7 on Saturday.

Lead photo by

Sanjin Avdicevic


Latest Videos



Latest Videos


加入谈话Loadcomments

Latest in City

Toronto condo owners are getting huge payout after falling balcony glass incidents

Screaming man chases and attacks TTC passenger for asking to turn down music

Toronto is getting a fake private jet where you can take Instagram pics

Video captures drivers dodging quicksand-like pothole in Toronto

Video shows tire fly off dump truck and casually exit Toronto highway

Group commended for calm reaction to racist aggressor filmed in Toronto

History-making journalist Ginella Massa announces departure from CBC News

Wild Ontario police chase video shows good boy doggo officers will always catch the bad guys