ontario reopening

Top doctor says Ontario may still be in Step 3 of reopening for at least two more months

Though we progressed out of Steps 1 and 2 of the province's reopening framework faster than anticipated, Ontario has been stuck in Step 3 fornearly two months now, though each step is only due to last for approximately 21 days.

While businesses and residents were expecting a return to "a full opening with some public health measures, if appropriate" as soon as Aug. 6, top health officials in the province determined that given key health indicators,we weren't quite ready at that pointto further loosen restrictions — and still aren't.

Initially, the main benchmark was getting one dose of an approved COVID-19 vaccine into at least 80 per cent of eligible residents 12+ (achieved over a month ago) and having at least 75 per cent fully vaxxed (we're currently sitting at nearly 78 per cent).

Second to that is the fact that no public health unit in the province can have a vaccination rate of less than 70 per cent and that other numbers, such as daily new case counts, remain "stable," whatever the government deems that to be (the last seven days ofepidemiology reportsshow that we've hovered between 564 and 944 new cases per day).

But, Chief Medical Officer of Health Dr. Kieran Mooresaid at the end of Julythat given new variants of concern, it would be most prudent to change the immunization goal from that 75 per cent number to 90 per cent — a substantial jump to help mitigate risk and strain on the healthcare system.

And, though more and more vaccine hesitant peopleare now rolling up their sleevesin the wake of the announcement of the province's疫苗护照程序, Moore has revealed that he doesn't think we'll be hitting that target anytime soon.

Though he acknowledged during a press conference on Tuesday that we are making progress as far as mass vaccination is concerned, Moore called it a "slow" crawl, saying that "if we stay at this pace, to get to a high enough protection level — so over 90 per cent — could take an additional 60 days."

He added that even though vaccination appointments made in the central booking portal doubled within hours of the passport announcement, "the pace has not yet picked up enough to significantly alter the timeline for getting 90 per cent of eligible Ontarians fully vaccinated."

As of Sept. 22, residents will need to show the proof of vaccination they received from the Ministry of Health after their jabsto enter indoor spaceslike bars, restaurants, movie theatres, casinos, concerts and sporting events. A standardized QR code is to follow within one month.

Whenever we do emerge from Step 3, measures such as masking, passive COVID screening and physical distancing ruleswill remain for the foreseeable future, though capacity and gathering limits will be nixed.

The province's COVID-19 Science Advisory Table, though — which is known for projecting worst-case scenarios thatdon't often come to fruitionis warning of inevitable lockdownsin the fall of more people don't get inoculated and if additional restrictions aren't implemented.

Premier Doug Ford, on the other hand, reassured the public mid-July thatlockdowns would never be returningto Ontario.

Lead photo by

A Great Capture


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