{"id":89572,"date":"2022-01-03T13:12:50","date_gmt":"2022-01-03T18:12:50","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/mileniostadium.com\/?p=89572"},"modified":"2022-01-04T11:57:40","modified_gmt":"2022-01-04T16:57:40","slug":"ontario-moves-school-online-pauses-non-urgent-procedures-as-part-of-new-covid-19-measures","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/mileniostadium.com\/local\/gta\/ontario-moves-school-online-pauses-non-urgent-procedures-as-part-of-new-covid-19-measures\/","title":{"rendered":"Ontario moves school online, pauses non-urgent procedures as part of new COVID-19 measures"},"content":{"rendered":"
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Ontario Premier Doug Ford announced a host of new public health measures Monday, nearly three weeks after the province’s science table warned that the Omicron variant could threaten the stability of the health-care system. (Chris Young\/The Canadian Press)<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

Ontario is moving schools online for at least two weeks, temporarily closing indoor dining and gyms and pausing non-urgent medical procedures\u00a0as it faces record-high case counts that, according to public health officials,\u00a0threaten to overwhelm the province’s health-care system.<\/strong><\/p>\n

Premier Doug Ford announced the changes at a morning news conference Monday. He was joined by his ministers of health, education and finance, as well Ontario’s chief medical officer of health and the CEO of Ontario Health.<\/p>\n

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The new restrictions are part of a modified version of Step Two of the province’s Roadmap to Reopen, which was first implemented earlier this year.<\/p>\n

“Our public health experts tell us we could see hundreds of thousands of cases every day,” Ford said\u00a0of the ongoing surge of new COVID-19 cases caused by\u00a0the\u00a0Omicron variant.<\/p>\n

He said that this could mean hospitals end up thousands of beds short.<\/p>\n

“If we don’t do everything possible to get this variant under control, the results could be catastrophic. It is a risk I cannot take.”<\/p>\n

The province announced all publicly funded and private schools will move to remote learning starting Jan.\u00a05 until at least Jan.\u00a017.<\/p>\n

The\u00a0move comes after last Thursday’s announcement, when Chief Medical Officer of Health Dr. Kieran Moore said the return to school date would be\u00a0pushed by two days to Wednesday\u00a0but would still be in-person. Moore said the province wanted to give schools extra time to provide N95 masks to staff and to deploy 3,000 HEPA filter units.<\/p>\n

Though they were asked repeatedly by reporters on Monday, provincial officials did not provide a list of any other specific steps they plan to take in order to ensure\u00a0a safe return to school on Jan. 17.<\/p>\n

Indoor dining closed, new capacity limits<\/h2>\n

The new restrictions announced today also include:<\/p>\n