Waterloo Region Record

Ontario won’t make vaccinatio­ns mandatory for any industry

Province has no plans to develop its own ‘vaccine passports’

- HOLLY MCKENZIE-SUTTER AND DENISE PAGLINAWAN

TORONTO — Ontario won’t make immunizati­on against COVID-19 mandatory for any industry, Premier Doug Ford said Thursday as businesses preparing to reopen indoor services grappled with whether to ask staff and patrons if they’d been vaccinated.

The province is set to move into Step 3 of its reopening plan on Friday, which will see gyms and restaurant­s resume indoor operations while cinemas, theatres and other indoor attraction­s can welcome customers once more after months of being shut down.

Restrictio­ns are being rolled back ahead of schedule thanks to positive pandemic trends and climbing vaccinatio­n rates — as of Thursday, 79 per cent of adult Ontarians had received one COVID-19 vaccine dose and 59 per cent had two shots.

Ford said his government isn’t planning to mandate COVID-19 vaccines for workers in any industry, nor is it going to develop a provincial “vaccine passport” similar to one announced in Quebec to determine access to certain activities.

“I think it’s our constituti­onal right to take it or not take it,” he said of vaccines against the virus. “I’ve been out here for months, begging, pleading (for) everyone to get it, but no one should be forced to do anything.”

He added that it’s up to private companies to come up with their own employee vaccinatio­n policies.

“We aren’t doing it, simple as that,” the premier said when asked about domestic vaccine passports.

The government has, however, pointed to the receipt of immunizati­on people receive after getting their shots that could be presented if certain businesses or other settings ask for it.

Restaurant­s Canada said vaccine passports showing proof of immunizati­on wouldn’t be a “silver bullet” guaranteei­ng safety, citing concerns about the pressure that would place on workers.

“Many (operators) are concerned about young staff being put in the position of verifying personal informatio­n and confrontin­g patrons,” the industry group in a statement.

“Throughout the pandemic, restaurant­s have shown their ability to operate safely and provide an alternativ­e to private gatherings in a regulated setting.”

GoodLife Fitness said on Twitter this week that the gym chain isn’t planning to require vaccinatio­n for staff or gym members entering any locations.

A group of Toronto strip clubs signalled this week that the businesses “would use their best efforts to ensure all staff and all dancers working in their clubs are vaccinated.”

“Admission to the Toronto Area Adult Clubs will only be granted to patrons who are vaccinated. While full vaccinatio­n is optimal, first dose patrons will be admitted at this time,” the Adult Entertainm­ent Associatio­n of Canada’s Toronto chapter said in a statement.

One of the businesses involved noted in a later statement that enforcing the policy will be tricky. Filmores Hotel said balancing privacy and safety concerns is a “fine line” and called verificati­on a “dynamic process” given the various ways to access the vaccine and different shots offered around the world.

Movie theatre chain Cineplex said it would comply with a vaccine policy if one was put place by the government.

“Until then, we feel confident in our approach, noting that we have welcomed seven million movie-lovers during the pandemic, and we’ve had zero instances of transmissi­on traced back to any of our cinemas,” spokespers­on Sarah Van Lange said in a statement.

 ?? RICHARD LAUTENS TORONTO STAR ?? Getting prepped for indoor dining, Mathew Power sets up Plexiglas barriers inside the dinning room at Hemmingway­s restaurant in Yorkville, Ont.
RICHARD LAUTENS TORONTO STAR Getting prepped for indoor dining, Mathew Power sets up Plexiglas barriers inside the dinning room at Hemmingway­s restaurant in Yorkville, Ont.

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