Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Alberta to announce timeline to end COVID-19 rules

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Feb, 2022 10:49 AM
  • Alberta to announce timeline to end COVID-19 rules

EDMONTON - Alberta Premier Jason Kenney says he will announce later today a plan to reduce COVID-19 health restrictions.

Kenney says it will be a prudent timeline to lift the rules provided pressure on hospitals continues to decline.

The premier announced last week that such a plan was coming and that the first step would be ending Alberta's vaccine passports to access non-essential businesses such as restaurants and bars.

The passport, known as a restriction exemption in the province, has become the symbol of the clash in Alberta on where the line should be between public health orders and individual rights and freedoms.

Opposition Leader Rachel Notley says Kenney needs to show the scientific data to support ending the decision and says without it, he appears to be prematurely ending health restrictions to pander to hardliners in his party and caucus.

Truckers and their supporters have been blockading the main U.S. border checkpoint at Coutts in southern Alberta on and off for a week in protest of vaccine rules.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Truck convoy takes up positions around Parliament

Truck convoy takes up positions around Parliament
The Ottawa Police Service said it was calling in reinforcements to help keep the peace as hundreds of vehicles and long-haul trucks continued their trek toward the nation's capital to demand an end to all COVID-19 restrictions, including vaccine passports, from every level of government.

Truck convoy takes up positions around Parliament

Coquitlam stabbing victim identified as 32 year old female Ramina Shah

Coquitlam stabbing victim identified as 32 year old female Ramina Shah
The Integrated Homicide Investigation Team (IHIT) was called in to investigate. The female victim has been identified as 32-year-old Ramina Shah from Maple Ridge. Her name and photo are being released in an effort to identify witnesses who may have seen her around the time of the incident.

Coquitlam stabbing victim identified as 32 year old female Ramina Shah

B.C. shootings believed to be murder-suicide

B.C. shootings believed to be murder-suicide
Homicide investigators say they believe the targeted shooting that left four people dead in a Richmond, B.C., home was a murder-suicide. The victims were all members of the same family and include a 71-year-old father, a 58-year-old mother, their 23-year-old son and a daughter, aged 21.

B.C. shootings believed to be murder-suicide

Concerns about retirement money, B.C. trial hears

Concerns about retirement money, B.C. trial hears
Kate Ryan-Lloyd, who was Craig James's deputy at the time of the 2012 payment, told a B.C. Supreme Court trial that she gave back the $118,000 benefit after James failed to provide her with a good explanation to justifying the payment.

Concerns about retirement money, B.C. trial hears

B.C. could lift restrictions starting Feb. 21

B.C. could lift restrictions starting Feb. 21
Dr. Bonnie Henry says that's possible in part because 90 per cent of residents aged 12 and over have received two doses of vaccine, though more people need to get a booster shot for longer-lasting protection.

B.C. could lift restrictions starting Feb. 21

Trudeau concerned about potential for violence

Trudeau concerned about potential for violence
In an interview with The Canadian Press, Trudeau says the "freedom convoy" is no longer a protest against the federal vaccine mandate for cross-border truckers and has morphed into a forum for a small minority of "very angry" people opposed to all public health measures to curb the spread of COVID-19, some of whom espouse violence.

Trudeau concerned about potential for violence