November 26, 2024

Ontario moving to Step 2 of reopening early as province sees 296 new COVID-19 cases

Step 2 #Step2

a group of people walking on a city street: In Step 2, non-essential retailers can operate at 25 per cent customer capacity, up from 15 per cent in Step 1. © Sam Nar/CBC In Step 2, non-essential retailers can operate at 25 per cent customer capacity, up from 15 per cent in Step 1.

Ontario’s outgoing chief medical officer of health held his last COVID-19 briefing Thursday morning, as the province announced it will be moving into the next step of its reopening plan ahead of schedule.

Ontario will proceed into Step 2 of its “Roadmap to Reopen” plan on June 30, two days before it was originally slated to do so. CBC News first reported the news yesterday.

As part of the criteria for moving to Step 2, the province had set vaccination targets of 70 per cent of adults with one dose and 20 per cent fully immunized. Those two measures are now at more than 76 per cent and 29 per cent, respectively — also above the thresholds for Step 3, the final phase.

In a news release, the provincial government also pointed to decreasing numbers of COVID-19 patients being treated in intensive care units. As of Wednesday, there were 305 people with COVID-related illnesses in ICUs (including 10 from Manitoba), down from more than 450 about two weeks ago.

Step 2 further loosens public health restrictions, with indoor, masked social gatherings of up to five people allowed. Similarly, up to 25 people would be able to attend outdoor functions, while as many as six people could dine together on a patio.

Personal care services like hair stylists and nail salons would also reopen, as long as masks are worn at all times.

Moreover, capacity limits on essential retail will move to 50 per cent, up from 25 per cent in Step 1, while non-essential retail capacity increases to 25 per cent, as opposed to 15 per cent.

Overnight camps can also reopen.

Ontario will likely stay in Step 2 for 21 days as initially intended, the province said, to “allow the most recent vaccinations to reach their full effectiveness and to evaluate any impacts … on key public health and health care indicators.”

Notably, Waterloo Region, which is battling a surge in cases driven by the more infectious delta variant of concern, will not advance to Step 2 with the rest of the province next week.

The region’s medical officer of health said the move is meant to “avoid having to take a step back” and to allow residents have more time to be vaccinated, with a possible further reopening in mid-July.

“This approach gives us the best chance to hold onto the gains we have made,” Dr. Hsiu-Li Wang said in a statement.

This morning, Dr. David Williams was joined at his last COVID-19 briefing by his successor, Dr. Kieran Moore.

Williams, who is set to retire tomorrow, has served in the role of chief medical officer of health since mid-2015.

“It has been a journey. We have gone through many things together,” Williams said of the last 18 months. The first case of COVID-19 in Ontario was confirmed on Jan. 25, 2020.

He added that it was “an honour” to serve as the province’s top public health official.

For his part, Moore thanked Williams and said that residents of Ontario owe him a “significant debt of gratitude.”

Moore, who was previously the local medical officer of health for Kingston, Frontenac and Lennox & Addington, will officially step into the new job on June 26.

“We have a lot of work still to do to continue to respond to this pandemic,” Moore said.

The provincial government says regularly scheduled COVID-19 response updates will move from Mondays and Thursdays to Tuesdays under Moore.

The briefing came as Ontario reported another 296 cases of COVID-19 today, marking the fourth straight day with fewer than 300 infections.

The case count is down from last Thursday, when the province saw 370.

Labs completed more than 29,500 tests and Public Health Ontario logged a positivity rate of 1.1 per cent, the lowest since Sept. 25, 2020.

The seven-day average of daily cases fell to 294.

Ontario: New daily cases of COVID-19

The Ministry of Health also recorded the deaths of six more people with the illness, pushing the official toll to 9,099.

Public health units collectively administered another 225,188 doses of COVID-19 vaccines yesterday, the most-ever on a Wednesday and the second-most ever on a single day. More than 88 per cent of those shots were second doses.

Later today, Premier Doug Ford will get his second dose of the AstraZeneca vaccine at a pharmacy in Etobicoke, his office says.

Ontario has continued to offer second shots of AstraZeneca to those who got a first despite the National Advisory Committee on Immunization’s recommendation that they opt for an mRNA vaccine, such as Pfizer or Moderna, instead.

“Premier Ford looks forward to receiving his second dose of the AstraZeneca vaccine, which provides very good protection against COVID-19, including against severe illness and hospitalization,” a spokesperson for his office said in an email.

“All Health Canada approved vaccines available in the province are safe and effective, and we are encouraging Ontarians to get vaccinated as soon as they are eligible.”

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