CanadáBlog

Toronto mayor, top doctor want to make masks mandatory indoors

Toronto city council will consider the recommendation later today

Toronto’s mayor and medical officer of health are recommending that non-medical masks and face coverings be made mandatory in indoor public spaces. “It is about respecting and protecting each other,” Mayor John Tory said at a morning news conference, adding that it will be a key element to reopening the city safely

“We hope there are more and more people out in the stores and in the businesses across the city. We want that to happen for the sake of our economy and for the sake of returning to a nearer to normal kind of life,” Tory said.  The recommendation is included in a report from Toronto’s medical officer of health, Dr. Eileen de Villa, that will go to council later today. Tory said he expects council to move ahead with the policy by implementing a temporary by-law. “Our doctor says that it works,” Tory added.

Toronto Mayor John Tory wants city council to implement a temporary by-law that would make non-medical masks and face coverings mandatory in public indoor spaces.

If the recommendation is adopted, the rule would take effect one week from today, when they also become mandatory on public transit in the city. But de Villa and Tory encouraged anyone who has access to a cloth mask to begin wearing one right away. They also noted that “suitable” exceptions will be made for anyone who cannot wear a mask for medical reasons, as well as for children under two years old.  Masks have worked to help curb the spread of COVID-19 in other jurisdictions in which residents consistently wear them, and that a mandatory mask rule results in higher uptake.  Toronto’s policy would remain in place until at least September, Tory said.

It comes one day after a call from mayors throughout the Greater Toronto and Hamilton Area for a mandatory mask policy across Ontario was rejected by Premier Doug Ford’s government. Ford has repeatedly said that he believes such a policy would be impossible to enforce, and that his government trusts people to make responsible decisions when they leave their homes. The province has opted instead for a policy of strongly encouraging the public to wear non-medical masks and face coverings in busy indoor spaces.

A spokesperson for Ontario’s Ministry of Health, however, pointed out that local medical officers of health have the power to implement face mask policies in their respective health regions under existing legislation, namely Section 22 of the Health Protection and Promotion Act. Brampton Mayor Patrick Brown and Mississauga Mayor Bonnie Crombie also held news conferences this morning to announce similar recommendations in Peel Region.

Tory said that there would not be any “aggressive enforcement” of the mask by-law in Toronto, but he hopes that residents will wear them because “it is the right thing to do.”  Asked about online videos capturing confrontations over masks at grocery stores and businesses in the United States, Tory said he believes that people opposed to wearing a face covering represent a “tiny, tiny minority.”

Meanwhile, the city of Kingston, Ont., has already made mask use mandatory for workers and customers at many indoor public locations following an outbreak of COVID-19 at a local nail salon.

Ontario reported 257 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday, with a majority of those in the Windsor-Essex public health unit, home to a high concentration of temporary agri-food workers who are housed in crowded conditions during the growing season.

CBC

Redes Sociais - Comentários

Artigos relacionados

Back to top button

 

O Facebook/Instagram bloqueou os orgão de comunicação social no Canadá.

Quer receber a edição semanal e as newsletters editoriais no seu e-mail?

 

Mais próximo. Mais dinâmico. Mais atual.
www.mileniostadium.com
O mesmo de sempre, mas melhor!

 

SUBSCREVER