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You are here: Home / News / Simcoe Muskoka to move to Red-Control zone on Feb. 16; North Bay Parry Sound to remain in shutdown

Simcoe Muskoka to move to Red-Control zone on Feb. 16; North Bay Parry Sound to remain in shutdown

By Doppler Online On February 12, 2021 News

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The Province announced today that 27 public health regions, including Simcoe Muskoka, will move into Ontario’s revised colour-coded COVID-19 Response Framework: Keeping Ontario Safe and Open. Four public health regions, Toronto Public Health, Peel Public Health, York Region Public Health, and North Bay Parry Sound District, will remain in the shutdown, and the Stay-at-Home order and all existing public health and workplace safety measures will continue to apply to these four public health regions.

North Bay Parry Sound District was initially among the list of health regions slated to return to the Framework next week, but a COVID-19 outbreak in North Bay has been linked to a variant of concern.

“The health and safety of Ontarians remains our number one priority. While we are cautiously and gradually transitioning some regions out of shutdown, with the risk of new variants this is not a reopening or a return to normal,” said Christine Elliott, Deputy Premier and Minister of Health. “Until vaccines are widely available, It remains critical that all individuals and families continue to adhere to public health measures and stay home as much as possible to protect themselves, their loved ones and their communities.”

Based on a general improvement in trends of key indicators, including lower transmission of COVID-19, improving hospital capacity, and available public health capacity to conduct rapid case and contact management, the following public health regions will be moving back to the Framework on Tuesday, February 16, 2021 at 12:01 a.m. and will no longer be subject to the Stay-at-Home order:

Grey-Lockdown:

·         Niagara Region Public Health

Red-Control:

·         Chatham-Kent Public Health;

·         City of Hamilton Public Health Services;

·         Durham Region Health Department;

·         Halton Region Public Health;

·         Middlesex-London Health Unit;

·         Region of Waterloo Public Health and Emergency Services;

·         Simcoe-Muskoka District Health Unit;

·         Southwestern Public Health;

·         Thunder Bay District Health Unit;

·         Wellington-Dufferin Guelph Public Health; and

·         Windsor-Essex County Health Unit.

Orange-Restrict:

·         Brant County Health Unit;

·         Eastern Ontario Health Unit;

·         Haldimand-Norfolk Health Unit;

·         Haliburton, Kawartha, Pine Ridge District Health Unit;

·         Huron Perth Public Health;

·         Lambton Public Health;

·         Ottawa Public Health;

·         Porcupine Health Unit; and

·         Public Health Sudbury and Districts.

Yellow-Protect:

·         Algoma Public Health;

·         Grey Bruce Health Unit;

·         Northwestern Health Unit; and

·         Peterborough Public Health.

Green-Prevent:

·         Leeds, Grenville and Lanark District Health Unit; and

·         Timiskaming Health Unit.

Visit Ontario.ca/covidresponse for the full list of public health region classifications.

For North Bay Parry Sound District, Peel Public Health, Toronto Public Health, and York Region Public Health, the Stay-at-Home order will continue until at least Monday, February 22, 2021.

After returning to the Framework, public health regions will stay in their level for at least two weeks at which time, the government will assess the impact of public health and workplace safety measures to determine if the region should stay where they are or be moved to a different level. Public health regions will move up through the levels, if necessary, based on the set indicators and thresholds outlined in the Framework.

Visitor restrictions for long-term care homes will once again apply to those homes in the public health regions that are in the Orange-Restrict level or higher. In addition, long-term care homes must implement enhanced testing requirements.

Recognizing the risk posed by new variants to the province’s pandemic response, Ontario is introducing an “emergency brake” to allow the Chief Medical Officer of Health, in consultation with the local medical officer of health, to immediately advise moving a region into Grey-Lockdown to interrupt transmission. Local medical officers of health also have the ability to issue Section 22 orders under the Health Protection and Promotion Act, to target specific transmission risks in the community.

“While the trends in public health indicators are heading in the right direction, we still have work to do,” said Dr. David Williams, Chief Medical Officer of Health. “Everyone is strongly advised to continue staying at home, avoid social gatherings, only travel between regions for essential purposes, and limit close contacts to your household or those you live with.”

The Chief Medical Officer of Health will continue to consult with public health and other experts, review data, and provide advice to the government on the appropriate and effective measures that are needed to protect the health of Ontarians.

 

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Reader Interactions

5 Comments

  1. Sandra Rae says

    February 12, 2021 at 4:12 pm

    What does RED mean in plain English

  2. Will Moore says

    February 12, 2021 at 4:51 pm

    Thank goodness the decision was not based on the whims of Dr. Gardner who, wanted Muskoka to remain in lockdown with a stay at home order continuing.
    Of course for Dr. Gardner who had a salary of approximately $284,000 for 2020, there is a limited concern on a personal basis.
    The outbreak at Roberta Place was the reason that Dr. Gardner attributed to his position. Any outbreak at a LTC facility is absolutely awful and our prayers should be directed to families and friends of all those affected.
    However, if Dr. Gardner had immediately directed sufficient resources In a timely fashion to contact tracing without hesitation, then containment of potential community spread would have been achieved straight away. Dr. Gardner would have had no cause to raise his concerns and position to continue with the misery of lockdown and stay at home orders.
    It is time for the Provincial Government to undertake an in-depth review of the Regional Medical Officer of Health positions to determine if the ongoing investment of $284,000 per annum, at the 2020 salary, is value for the taxpayers. Or, can we eliminate the high salaried bureaucracy, such as this, and reinvest these savings into more Public Health Nursing positions that actually do deliver services to the taxpayers.

  3. Sandy McLennan says

    February 12, 2021 at 9:23 pm

    If not plain, here’s the text from the Indicators and Thresholds section of the Ontario government web page, as linked from the press release article:
    https://www.ontario.ca/page/covid-19-response-framework-keeping-ontario-safe-and-open

    It’s been informative (and time-taking) to read these documents of law and regulation. I think we’re going to have to learn to do more of that for ourselves. That or take others’ word for it.

    Red – Control

    Epidemiology:
    • Weekly incidence rate is 40 per 100,000 or more
    • Percent positivity is 2.5% or more
    • Rt is 1.2 or more
    • Repeated outbreaks in multiple sectors and settings, increasing number of large outbreaks
    • Level of community transmission and non-epi linked cases increasing

    Health system capacity:
    • Hospital and ICU capacity at risk of being overwhelmed

    Public health system capacity:
    • Public health unit capacity for case and contact management at risk or overwhelmed.

  4. John Murray says

    February 13, 2021 at 8:30 am

    So based on the new guidelines it would appear we are better off being associated with Simcoe Health Authority rather than North Bay/Parry Sound as they remain in full lockdown?

    Can we just do a recount on all those comments in favour of North Bay/Parry Sound health authority?

    We can’t win either way eh!

  5. Ralph Cliffe says

    February 13, 2021 at 5:13 pm

    Why does Muskoka have to be connected with any other region?
    Can we not be our own community and stand independent?
    Would it mean another medical officer of health at $240.000?

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