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Ontario lifts mask mandate in most settings March 21, all directives to drop by April 27

Ontario lifts mask mandate in most settings March 21 all directives to drop by April 27
Masks will no longer be required in most social settings such as restaurants, gyms, large event spaces and even in schools by Monday, March 21.

The Ontario government says it will be lifting the mask mandate in many indoor public settings on March 21.

Dr. Kieran Moore, Ontario’s chief medical officer of health, made the announcement on Wednesday, saying the move is another step towards how the province can “live and manage COVID-19.”

Masks will no longer be required in most social settings such as restaurants, gyms, large event spaces and even in schools.

However, the mask mandate will remain in place for higher-risk settings such as transit, long-term care, retirement homes, hospitals, shelters, jails and congregate care and living settings.

This move comes as Ontario has already lifted all capacity limits and proof of vaccination at the beginning of March.

Read more: Ontario’s top doctor to provide update Wednesday on ‘plan to live with’ COVID-19

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The government will be extending the “Reopening Ontario Act” (ROA) on March 28, as it is set to expire, for another 30 days. Officials said this is the final extension for the act to invoke emergency orders.

The province said it is removing masking requirements in all remaining settings, as well as any other directives and orders on April 27.

After this date, masks will not be mandatory but will be encouraged and highly recommended for those who are immunocompromised, at high risk, or who choose to still use them, officials said.

“And anyone who wants to wear a mask … They’re more than welcome to. It’s going to be up to the people,” Premier Doug Ford said Wednesday at an unrelated news conference in Brantford, Ont. just minutes before Moore was set to speak.

Ford also said for local medical officers of health who want to implement their own mask mandates in their specific regions will have to go through Dr. Moore.

Officials noted that although masking is not required under the emergency orders, the Ministry of Health guidelines will remain in place for settings such as hospitals, where staff will be required to wear personal protective equipment. Hospital organizations and other high-risk organizations can also choose to implement their own policies, the government said.

“A process is now underway to gradually revoke all directives and instructions by the end of April with a focus on moving away from emergency measures to ongoing operations,” Moore said. “Moving away from reliance on provincial emergency direction through mandatory requirements.”

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In addition, on March 14, the government is revoking another directive that mandated immunization policies in long-term care homes. The province said it will continue to provide rapid tests and that organizations can retain their own policies.

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CMOH Directives & Letter of Instructions. Government of Ontario

When asked by reporters if the government would consider re-implementing a mask mandate in the fall or winter as colder weather moves in, Moore said they are looking at certain criteria.

“We’re going to maintain a robust surveillance system going into the fall,” Moore said. “We’re going to have a testing strategy that will allow, through PCR, to detect multiple different viruses. So whether its influenza A, influenza B, RSV (respiratory syncytial virus), and or COVID-19.”

He said that surveillance system will run through emergency departments and primary care, as no changes to PCR testing have been made for the general public.

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“If we’re seeing multiple different viruses circulating, and we can anticipate those four … to co-circulate, we would make recommendations to mask at that time, if we see an increasing burden on the hospital system, despite potential immunization strategy for influenza and/or for COVID. We may make a move from a recommendation to a mandate for masking.”

“But that would follow data, would follow the surveillance, the circulation of those viruses and the impact on the hospital before we would ever make a recommendation to mandate,” Moore said.

Moore re-iterated that masking is now “a choice” based on an individual’s “risk assessment” and not a mandate after March 21, as Ontario is past the peak of the Omicron wave in January.

“The risk now is less than it was in the first, second or third week of January… Our public health recommendations have to be proportionate, have to be balanced and you have to recognize you can’t mandate masking forever,” Moore said.

Read more: Ontario to remove incidental deaths from COVID-19 data reporting

The province has also updated its isolation guidelines for close contacts.

The new guidance, effective Wednesday, indicates that no isolation is required for household or non-household contacts of a COVID-19-positive case. Previously, vaccinated Ontarians were required to isolate for five days, with non-vaccinated for 10 days for being a close contact.

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Household and non-household contacts are being asked to self-monitor for symptoms, wear a mask and avoid activities where mask removal is necessary and not visit those in high-risk settings or at a higher risk of illness for 10 days after exposure.

For those who are immunocompromised, self-isolation was 20 days but is now reduced to 10 days. Additional precautions such as masking, avoiding highest risk settings and vulnerable individuals for an additional 10 days.

— With files from Matthew Bingley

© 2022 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

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