BEFORE JC. closes nightclubs and independent banquet halls, ending the sale of alcohol in restaurants after 10 p. m. and counts the positions to decrease the volume of music to verbal exchange levels, as COVID-19 instances continue in the province.
Bars and restaurants must close at 11 p. m. unless they’re serving food.
Adjustments to public aptitude orders occur when the province has reported 429 new cases of COVID-19 over a four-day period, raising the total number of cases in British Columbia. Two people, either in long-term care, died of the virus. .
The new figures constitute 4 reporting periods over the long weekend. Provincial fitness official Dr. Bonnie Henry said there were 123 cases between Friday and Saturday, 116 between Saturday and Sunday, 107 between Sunday and Monday and 83 new cases between Monday. Tuesday and Tuesday.
There are 3 new outbreaks of physical care at Burnaby General Hospital, Rideau Retirement Center and Holy Family Hospital. There is no new outbreak in the network, there have been several occasions of exposure on the Lower Continent. Hospitalizations in British Columbia remain relatively stable, with 32 others. hospital and 12 others in resuscitation.
Henry that the amended orders had been issued as a “last resort. “
“We that those sites have tried. We’ve made changes but there are still exhibitions,” he said.
“Go to a nightclub, go to a bar, go to someone’s space, enclosed spaces with face-to-face encounters with other people we don’t know . . . it’s a risk. “
Henry also reiterated that residents of British Columbia reduce their social interactions as they practice the fall, holding the bubbles to five or six people.
He said the province’s philosophical technique for tackling the pandemic was to take into account mandatory minimum restrictions, but that occasions of exposure in places such as nightclubs had an “important source” of transmission, which depleted public fitness resources.
“We want to do the least imaginable according to order and make sure we can help others do the right things they want for their own situation,” he said.
When asked if she was involved in the closure of nightclubs taking others to personal parties, she said the province would continue to impose fines, i. e. repeat offenders. But despite the accumulation in cases similar to personal occasions and places, Henry A stated that BC is “lucky” that the transmission of the network remains low and that the province has no plans to delay the return to school.
“If we don’t put our network precedence back on [schools], we will have long-term generational disadvantages,” he said.
Henry said he believed restaurants were still safe environments, adding that he “couldn’t without them,” especially as the industry struggled to put individualized protection plans into effect.
Early Tuesday, Henry said B. C. experiencing a “second wave” of COVID-19 cases and looking to introduce new measures to help curb the spread of the virus.
At the beginning of the pandemic, fitness officers and epidemiologists predicted a momentary wave, probably related to colder weather. Now, the model predicts a trend of instances more like ripples or “bumps,” as Henry called them in the past, that will fire when there are enough other people in a population complacent with physical distance measurements.
“I think we’re on our wave of moments,” Henry said, speaking on CBC’s The Early Edition on Tuesday morning.
“It’s partly because our tests are higher and we’ve had contact with other younger people. And I think other people needed a little release in the summer. It was very excessive measures that we took in March and April, and it was very worrying about other people. “
On Tuesday, a possible exhibition was shown between staff and academics at a personal school in West Vancouver. In a letter to parents, Mulgrave School Principal John Wray wrote that the exposure occurred while the ninth graders were off campus for an off-site day camp experience.
Vancouver Coastal Health is lately conducting contact studies and those academics and are ingingsing for two weeks. All academics were components of the same learning organization and camp activities were carried out outdoors, with physical estating measures in place.
“We had great success at the beginning of the year. This occasion would possibly seem like a setback, however, such exhibits are expected and we are confident in the formula that Vancouver Coastal Health has implemented,” Wray wrote in the letter. .
British Columbia’s restrictions began to decrease in mid-May, when public aptitude orders were gradually lifted. BEFORE CHRIST, he entered phase 3 of his plan of reaction to a pandemic at the end of June, allowing the interior of the province.
By mid-July, cases had begun to increase and British Columbia recorded its biggest increase in a new-case day on August 28.
“We had an era of grace during the summer, and we allowed other people to have that time,” Henry said. “We know we want to get our attention and prioritize things like getting young people back to school.
@MichelleGhsoub
Michelle Ghoussoub is a reporter for cbc News in Vancouver, has reported in the past in Lebanon and Chile. Contact her on michelle. ghoussoub@cbc. ca or on Twitter @MichelleGhsoub.
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