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Hamilton-area health officials conflicted about Ontario plan to lift some COVID-19 mask rules

Hamilton-area health officials conflicted about Ontario plan to lift some COVID-19 mask rules

CBC
Thursday, March 10, 2022 02:16:53 AM UTC

Health officials in the Hamilton area are conflicted about Ontario's plan to lift COVID-19 measures.

The province has announced its masking requirements will be removed in most indoor settings like restaurants, stores and schools on March 21, with all remaining mask requirements and emergency orders set to expire April 27.

Dr. Peter Jüni, who heads Ontario's COVID-19 Science Advisory table, said "it's too early to tell" if removing mask mandates is the right move at this time.

Niagara's medical officer of health, Dr. Mustafa Hirji, said in an email his public health unit disagrees with the decision to remove masking requirements, saying it should happen when there are fewer COVID-19 cases.

On Twitter, he said masking is not a restriction. It's a "temporary common sense protection."

"Like speed limits aren't restrictions on freedom; they protect freedom to be safe on the road. Masks protect living life around COVID-19. Hard for vulnerable [people] to live if in hospital, dying," he wrote.

Hirji said in his email that the public health unit is still reviewing the rest of the announcement.

He also said that for now, there aren't plans to impose additional measures through a Sec. 22 order, but the health unit will review its plans as it gets closer to March 21.

Dr. Menaka Pai, a member of Ontario's COVID-19 Science Advisory Table and an associate professor of medicine at Hamilton's McMaster University, called the move to end masking in schools "callous" and "thoughtless."

The Children's Health Coalition, which includes McMaster Children's Hospital, released a statement encouraging people to continue wearing masks after March 21.

But Hamilton public health is "cautiously optimistic" about the province's plan, according to Dr. Ninh Tran, the city's associate medical officer of health.

"While Hamilton is past the peak and witnessing the decline of the Omicron-driven wave, we anticipate the risk of transmission will remain high through April as public health measures are lifted," Tran said in an email.

Dr. Matt Strauss, acting medical officer of health for the Haldimand-Norfolk Health Unit, said it's the right time to relax public health measures and allow people to take off their masks because of current vaccination rates.

"I understand throwing the kitchen sink at a problem like COVID-19 a year and a half ago when vaccines were not available, but we don't need to use the kitchen sink anymore."

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