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Manitoba now permitting child-care staff with mild COVID-19 symptoms, negative test result to go to work

Manitoba now permitting child-care staff with mild COVID-19 symptoms, negative test result to go to work

CBC
Sunday, January 02, 2022 02:37:28 PM UTC

The province is now permitting workers at child care facilities, child and family services and others who have mild COVID-19 symptoms but have tested negative for the virus to return to work.

Agency or service provider staff in early learning and child care facilities, community living disability services, child and family services group care as well as homeless and family violence shelters are among the latest to be permitted to work under certain criteria, Manitoba Families said in a memo circulated to people in the industries on Friday.

These workers who were off sick can now self-screen for their return by getting a negative test result from provincial testing site or health-care facility, or two negative self-administered rapid tests, the memo says. 

Workers must also have mild symptoms and no fever without medication for 24 hours prior to their return. 

The memo goes on to say that if these workers experience new or worsening symptoms, they must let their employer know immediately and self-isolate until they get their test results back. 

Some employers in the field feel concerned about this move.

Lynda Raible, the president elect of the Manitoba Child Care Association and executive director of the Earl Grey Children's Centre, says the move is premature because rapid tests and higher quality masks like N95 and KN95 masks aren't being made readily available to her vaccinated staff.

"I do understand the need to get the economy going and have child care accessible and available for parents, but not at this cost, at this point in time, until I have those supplies that I desperately require in order to be able to say to my staff, 'Yeah, here's a rapid test for you. You don't have to go and, you know, scout it out somewhere or order it online or stand in line somewhere to get it,'" she said.

The executive director of the child care association Jodie Kehl echoes Raible's concerns.

"We all need child care. The barista at Starbucks needs child care, the doctor at the hospital needs child care," she said.

"We have an obligation to protect the sector."

Just like other sectors, Kehl says the child-care sector has been hit hard with absences due to COVID-19. Masks and rapid tests could help protect workers.

Manitoba Liberal leader Dougald Lamont says it's the wrong move to send people back to work without the adequate supports.

"The government is still putting people in harm's way because instead of thinking better safe than sorry, the PCs seem to think it's better sorry than safe," he said in an interview on Saturday.

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