A look at the latest COVID-19 developments in Canada
A look at the latest COVID-19 news in Canada:
— Health experts and government critics are calling on the prime minister and premiers to fix cracks in Canada’s health system and improve surge capacity as the COVID-19 pandemic continues. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was speak with provincial and territorial leaders Monday afternoon to discuss the mounting health crisis posed by the Omicron variant of COVID-19. In a press conference Monday, Conservative ethics critic John Brassard said Canadians have been dealing with lockdowns and restrictions for two years while very little was done to address surge capacity in hospitals. Ontario Premier Doug Ford plans to raise the provinces’ plea for more federal health-care funds with the prime minister.
— Opposition MPs want the House of Commons ethics committee to investigate the Public Health Agency of Canada’s decision to collect data from millions of mobile phones to understand travel patterns during the COVID pandemic. Conservative and Bloc Québécois MPs want the committee to hold emergency meetings this month while the House of Commons is still on its holiday break because the agency is seeking to extend the practice. Tory MP John Brassard says the pandemic is being used as an excuse to undermine the privacy of Canadians who were unaware a government agency has been collecting cellphone data.
— Ontario will allow retired teachers to work more days in light of ongoing pandemic-related staff shortages. The new agreement with the Ontario Teachers’ Federation will allow retirees to be re-employed in the public school system for 95 days until the end of June, nearly double the previous limit of 50. Education Minister Stephen Lecce says in a statement that school boards were affected by staff shortages even before the Omicron variant drove up absence rates.