Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. to ease COVID restrictions on masks, vax card

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Mar, 2022 03:32 PM
  • B.C. to ease COVID restrictions on masks, vax card

VICTORIA - British Columbia will lift its mask mandate and capacity limits for faith gatherings on Friday, while restrictions of visitors at some long-term care facilities will be dropped, as long as they are fully vaccinated and tested for COVID-19 when entering.

Provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry said cases of COVID-19 have declined 34 per cent in the last month and as transmission goes down, so do the risks of contracting the virus.

"While today is another really positive step forward, we have to be ready to bring some tools back, if necessary, depending on the situation as it changes," Henry told a news conference Thursday.

Starting on April 8, the B.C. vaccine card will no longer be needed to access restaurants and other venues, while businesses can shift away from their COVID-19 safety plans.

Public health orders requiring safety plans to be submitted to a medical health officer for overnight child and youth camps will also be lifted on Friday. Masks, physical distancing and restrictions on visitors at schools will be rescinded when students return from spring break on April 4 in most districts.

However, Henry said any students or teachers who wish to continue wearing masks should be supported.

"The need for every single one of these particular layers of protection has dropped below the threshold where we need to have an order for them to be in place," she said. "That means we can move from a mandated approach to an empowered self-management approach."

Henry said that by March 18, most long-term care facilities are expected to be ready for more visitors who can resume supporting their loved ones, but staff shortages are an issue at some sites.

"Operators may need to manage visitation based on the situation with each individual care home. So what I'm asking for is patience over the coming week. All of the care home operators will communicate with families around their plans for resuming broader social visitation," she said, adding visits may have to be planned in advance or spaced out in some cases.

British Columbia did well in containing the latest wave of COVID-19 compared with other jurisdictions across the country, with lower infections and hospital admissions, she said.

The science shows the risks are much lower, and while they are not zero, she's confident health officials can safely make the changes, Henry said.

Masks and the vaccine card may still be required by some businesses, including those that are federally regulated.

Henry said she will continue to wear a mask on transit and anyone who wears one in whatever situation they're in, or chooses to maintain a physical distance, may be immunocompromised, so it's important for others to be respectful of individuals' situations.

TransLink, which operates bus and train service in Metro Vancouver, announced Thursday that masks would no longer be mandatory starting Friday. However, it said customers and employees would still be required to wear masks on HandyDart, the service that supports those who are unable to navigate conventional public transit without help.

She cited high vaccination rates as a factor in dropping restrictions. But the percentage of vaccinated children between the ages of five and 11 remains low, with about 30 per cent of those in that age range having received two doses, according to data from the BC Centre for Disease Control.

Both Henry and Health Minister Adrian Dix have called on more parents to get their kids vaccinated.

Teri Mooring, president of the BC Teachers' Federation, said she has called for a dedicated awareness program to ramp up vaccination rates by having clinics in schools.

"We're hearing that work is being done in this respect, but it's not been effective enough because those rates are extremely low," Mooring said.

The province reported 336 new cases on Thursday and four more deaths, for a total of 2,932 fatalities from COVID-19.

It said 91.3 per cent of eligible adults have received their second dose of a vaccine, and 58.3 per cent have had three doses.

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. high school snuffs out wildfire logo

B.C. high school snuffs out wildfire logo
The Lillooet Secondary School administration says in a letter to families the wildfire logo holds a different meaning after the fatal blaze that burned through Lytton, and the nearby Elephant Hill fire in 2017 that destroyed more than 100 homes.

B.C. high school snuffs out wildfire logo

Amardip Singh Rai wanted on 17 charges including sexual assault

Amardip Singh Rai wanted on 17 charges including sexual assault
Amardip Singh Rai is described as a 42-year-old South Asian Male, 5’11, slim build, with brown eyes, black hair and often has facial hair. He has tattoos including roses on his hands, scroll with words on his neck, a cancer ribbon on his neck and a tiger on his chest.    

Amardip Singh Rai wanted on 17 charges including sexual assault

Surrey RCMP make arrest for alleged personal robbery inside the ATM area of a Newton bank

Surrey RCMP make arrest for alleged personal robbery inside the ATM area of a Newton bank
On January 16, 2022, at 8:54 p.m., Surrey RCMP received the report of a personal robbery inside a bank in the 13600-block of 72 Avenue. The victim was depositing cash into the ATM when they were approached and allegedly robbed. 

Surrey RCMP make arrest for alleged personal robbery inside the ATM area of a Newton bank

Freeland asked to scrap carbon capture tax credit

Freeland asked to scrap carbon capture tax credit
More than 400 Canadian climate scientists and other academics are pleading with Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland to scrap her plan to create a tax credit for companies that build carbon capture and storage facilities. Freeland floated the idea of the tax credit in last year's federal budget and consultations to design it ended just before Christmas.

Freeland asked to scrap carbon capture tax credit

Canada Post seeking clarification on mask policy

Canada Post seeking clarification on mask policy
Canada Post says it is seeking "clarification" from the federal government about face masks after drawing criticism for refusing to let employees bring their own N95 masks to work. The Crown corporation earlier this week said employees had to use a Canada Post-issued cloth mask or disposable medical mask, or they would be sent home.

Canada Post seeking clarification on mask policy

Four people were hospitalized in three separate stabbings on the Downtown Eastside yesterday.

Four people were hospitalized in three separate stabbings on the Downtown Eastside yesterday.
In a statement, Supt. Duncan Pound of B.C.'s anti-gang squad says its investigations into the shootings in Langley, Surrey and Coquitlam — in which one person was killed and the bystanders were hurt — indicate they appear to be connected to the drug trade. 

Four people were hospitalized in three separate stabbings on the Downtown Eastside yesterday.