Everything you need to know about COVID-19 in Alberta on Tuesday, March 2 - Action News
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Everything you need to know about COVID-19 in Alberta on Tuesday, March 2

Alberta may follow British Columbia's lead and lengthen the time between administering first and second doses of COVID-19 vaccines, Health Minister Tyler Shandro said Tuesday, a day after officials announced the province would move to a modified version of Step 2 of easing restrictions.

Alberta may extend period between doses of COVID-19 vaccines

The Alberta government says low-intensity exercises include weightlifting, low-intensity dance classes, yoga, barre and indoor climbing, as well as the low-intensity use of treadmills, ellipticals and related equipment. Masks must still be worn. (Steven Senne/AP/The Canadian Press)

The latest:

  • As of Tuesday, there were261 people being treated in hospital for COVID-19, an increase offour from the day before, and 54 people in intensive care beds.
  • Albertareported257 new casesof COVID-19 on Tuesday.
  • 5,864coronavirustests were completed with a positivity rate of 4.5per cent.
  • There are4,631active casesacross the provinceas well as two more deaths.
  • Thirty-five additional variant cases were recorded on Tuesday, bringing the total to492.
  • Of those variantcases, 484arethe strain first identified in the U.K. and eight are the strain first identified in South Africa.
  • Alberta's R-value has decreased slightly to 1.01, from 1.03, but stillmeansthat more than one person on average contracts COVID-19 from each positive case. An R-value above 1.0 indicates exponential growth. Outside of Calgary and Edmonton, the R-value fell from 1.13 to 0.94.
  • Alberta may follow British Columbia's lead and lengthen the time between administering first and second doses of COVID-19 vaccines, Health Minister Tyler Shandro said Tuesday.
  • Emerging evidence from the United Kingdom, B.C., and Quebec suggests the first dose of the two vaccines currently being distributed in Alberta can provide 90-per-cent protection against the novel coronavirus that causes COVID-19, and that protection can last for months. Alberta health officials and physicians are now reviewing that new evidence and examining whether the province can further delay second shots.
  • As of March 1, the province's COVID-19 vaccination rollouthas resulted in245,054doses of vaccine being administered. That number includes88,539Albertans who are fully immunized with two doses ofvaccine.
  • Kenneysaid Mondaythat casesin the province's long-term care homes haveplummeted by 95per cent after vaccinations.
  • On Feb. 19, the vaccination program expanded toall residents in retirement centres, lodges and othersupportive and congregateliving facilities with residents aged 75 or older.
  • Last Wednesday, it expanded to include all Albertans born in 1946 and earlier about 230,000 more people, and nearly half of those eligible 110,000 people had booked their vaccinations by last Friday.
  • Vaccinations also became available for allFirst Nations, Inuit, Mtis and persons 65 years of age and over living in a First Nations community or Mtis Settlement.in the province.
  • Appointments for Albertans born in 1946 or earlier canbe booked online or by calling 811, at 58 sites around the province.
  • On Monday Alberta Premier Jason Kenney, along withShandro andDr. DeenaHinshawannouncedthe province would begin moving on to Step 2 of its plan to lift COVID-19 public health restrictions.
  • Libraries will now be able to open to 15 per cent of fire code capacity.
  • Low-intensity individual and group fitness activities, such as low-intensity yoga, Pilates and tai-chi,as well as the low-intensity use of treadmills, ellipticals and related equipment,will now be permitted at gyms as long as people are following public health rules likemaintaining aphysical distance of three metresbetween participants.
  • Shandroclarified Tuesday that "low-intensity" activities are those that don't significantly raise a person's breathing rate, and said gyms and clients will be allowed to make such decisions for themselves.
  • All indoor fitness must be pre-registered no drop-ins allowed.
  • The provincewill hold off on easing restrictions furtheron retail businesses, hotels, banquet halls and children's sports.
  • Kenney cited a plateauing of case numbers and a slight increase in the testing positivity rate for the decision to delay the full reopening of Stage 2.
  • The province willwait "at least three weeks" before the cabinet COVID-19 committee makes a decision about moving forward with Step 3,Shandro said at Monday's news conference.
  • Hinshaw will deliver her next update on Wednesday afternoon, although the province will release updated COVID-19 numbers on its website Tuesday afternoon.
  • However,Kenney, Shandro andFinance Minster Travis Toewshave scheduleda news conference at 11 a.m. Tuesday to highlight funding in the 2021 budget aimed at supporting the health-care system and Alberta's pandemic response. CBC News will carry it live here and on Facebook.
  • Scott Wildeman, president of the Fitness Industry Council of Canada and an instructor with GYMVMT in Calgary, says he believes the delay in opening more thoroughly will likely be the end of many fitness studios that focus exclusively on high-intensity workouts. "They've extended, they've borrowed, they've put their life savings into this and those groups are really in trouble.It's been completely decimating to our industry."
  • However, Edmonton emergency room physician Dr. Shazma Mithani says she is happy the Alberta government isn't moving aheadwith its full Step 2 reopening plan. "It's clear that they are taking this seriously, which they should be," she said.
  • The province had set out two benchmarks to consider before moving between the steps of its plan to lift restrictions: time and hospitalizations.
  • Monday will mark the specified three weeks since the province moved into Phase 1, when restaurants and bars were permitted to reopen for indoor service, with restrictions.
  • Alberta is currently below its 450 hospitalizations, which was the benchmark for moving to Phase 2.
(CBC)
  • Shandrosaid earlier this month thatvaccinations for those 75 and older would soon be available at 102 community pharmacies in Calgary, Edmonton and Red Deer as well as at the AHS sites. A list of participating pharmacies is available on the Alberta Blue Cross website.
  • Family doctors and their clinical staff will be included in Phase 2 of Alberta's COVID-19 vaccine rollout. That's expected to take place between April and September.

You can see active cases by local health area on the following interactive map. Scroll, zoom and click on the map for more information.

See the detailed regional breakdown

Here is thedetailed regional breakdownof active cases as of Tuesday:

  • Calgary zone: 1,560, down from 1,562(49,155 recovered).
  • Edmonton zone: 1,030, up from 1,014 (51,882 recovered).
  • North zone: 1,061, down from 1,084 (10,794recovered).
  • South zone: 333, up from328(6,135 recovered).
  • Central zone: 636, down from672 (9,471 recovered).
  • Unknown: 11, down from 14(94 recovered).

Find out which neighbourhoods or communities have the most cases, how hard people of different ages have been hit, the ages of people in hospital, how Alberta compares to other provinces and more in: Here are the latest COVID-19 statistics for Alberta and what they mean

Here are the latest Alberta COVID-19 stories:


Decisions about 'safe' fitness activities will be made by gyms andclients, health minister says

Decisions about what constitutes "safe" indoor fitness activities will be left to gym owners and their clients, Alberta's health minister says.

Under Step 2 of the province's relaunch plan, announced on Monday, gyms and fitness centres were allowed to reopen for "low-intensity" activities.

Health Minister Tyler Shandro said Tuesday there was some confusion about which activities would be allowed, and he tried to clear that up.

"If you operate a gym, you can be open," he said. "That is perfectly within the rules."

Shandro said "low-intensity" activities are those that don't significantly raise a person's breathing rate, and said gyms and clients will be allowed to make such decisions for themselves.

"We're relying on owners and clients to use judgment, to show good faith," Shandro said at a news conference.

Alberta reported two more deaths and 257 news cases of COVID-19 on Tuesday.

For more, see:Decisions about 'safe' fitness activities will be made by gyms, clients, health minister says


Alberta may extend time between doses of COVID-19 vaccines

Alberta may follow British Columbia's lead andlengthen the time between administering first and second doses of COVID-19 vaccines, Health Minister Tyler Shandro says.

Emerging evidence from the United Kingdom, B.C., and Quebec suggests the first dose of the two vaccines currently being distributed in Alberta can provide 90-per-cent protection against the novel coronavirus that causes COVID-19, and that protection can last for months.

Alberta health officials and physicians are now reviewing that new evidence and examining whether the province can further delay second shots, Shandro said at a Tuesday news conference.

"It's going to give us an opportunity to get more people vaccinated more quickly, which is going to be fantastic news for Albertans," he said.

Manufacturers' instructions say the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccinedoses should be given 21 days apart and Moderna dosesshould be 28 days apart.

The National Advisory Committee on Immunization said prolonging the wait to 42 days is acceptable in places where there's high community transmission, strain on the health-care system and limited vaccine supply. Vaccine shipments to Canada were significantly delayed in February.


With COVID-19 cases declining, Alberta eases into Step 2 of reopening plan

With COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations continuing to decline, Alberta eased some public health restrictions on Monday to allow fitness centres and libraries to partially reopen.

Alberta Premier Jason Kenneymade the announcement at a news conference on Monday.

"Today, I am here to announce that Alberta is ready to safely and cautiously enter Step 2 of our path forward," Kenney said. "I want to thank every Albertan who has responsibly observed [public health] measures through Step 1 over the past several weeks to protect lives and our health-care system in the process.

"I know this has not been easy, especially with cold weather in February limiting our ability to gather outdoors. But the sacrifices Albertans have made are the reason that we're able to take another step forward today. COVID-19 is still here and it is still very much a threat to our health and our health-care system. Still, over the past few months, Alberta has made tremendous progress."

Libraries are nowallowed to reopenwith 15 per cent of fire-code capacity, and fitness centres areallowed to resume low-intensity individual and group workouts for adults, Kenney said.

Premier Jason Kenney says Alberta moving carefully with reopening plans

4 years ago
Duration 2:35
Alberta cracked open the doors of libraries and gyms Monday in a careful lifting of restrictions aimed at keeping COVID-19 in check, says Premier Jason Kenney.

As a precautionary measure, possible changes to current restrictions for retail, hotels, banquets, community halls and conference centres have been delayed, the premier said, given that the province has seen a slightincrease recently in the testing positivity rate and the number of active cases.

The province is taking a "careful approach" to reopening, Kenney said,and despite the fact that hospitalizations are well below Step 2 thresholds, there has been a small increase in the daily number of new variant cases.

The province willwait "at least three weeks" before the cabinet COVID-19 committee makes a decision about moving forward with Step 3, Health Minister Tyler Shandro said.


Some stakeholders express confusion, disappointment atscaled-back Stage 2

Some business owners and stakeholders are expressing confusion and disappointment after the Alberta government announced that Stage 2 of its reopening plan would start with a scaled-back approach to easing restrictions.

InitiallyStage 2 included the potential reopening of facilities that included banquet halls, community halls and conference centres, and the further reopening of fitness facilities.

Scott Wildeman, the president of the Fitness Industry Council of Canada and an instructor with GYMVMT in Calgary, says safety protocols in Alberta's fitness facilities were robust. (CBC)

Instead, it will nowbegin with libraries reopening at 15 per cent of fire code capacity. Low-intensity individual and group fitness activities, such as light strength training,Pilates and tai-chi, are also now permitted at gyms.

But high-intensity workouts including spinning and CrossFitcurrently remain prohibited, and restrictions on hotels, community and banquet halls, and conference centres will continueuntil Stage3 "at least" three weeks away, Shandro said Monday.

"To be honest, my heart stopped a bit [when I heard the announcement]," said Christine Dairon, the marketing director for the Delta by Marriott Calgary South.


Delay of some Step 2 reopenings welcomed by Edmonton ER doctor

An Edmonton emergency room physician says she is happy the Alberta government isn't moving aheadwith its full Step 2 reopening planeven though the number of hospitalizations is well below the province's required benchmark.

"It's clear that they are taking this seriously, which they should be," Dr. Shazma Mithani said in an interview Monday shortly after Premier Jason Kenney and Health Minster Tyler Shandro announced the easing of restrictions.

"I think the assumption in general was that they were just going to push through. I'm happy to see that that's not what's happening, that they really are looking at the leading indicators and adjusting accordingly."

Those indicators include the R-value, the positivity rate and number of new cases. Mithani said the presence of the more highly contagious variant strains of coronavirusin Alberta is a high concern.


COVID-19 enforcement power issued to peace officers expires

The recent expiry of a ministerial order means some Alberta peace officers no longer have the authority to enforce COVID-19 rules under the public health act.

According to a bulletinposted onlineby the Alberta government,level onecommunity peace officers and level twoAlberta peace officers saw those temporaryenforcement powers expire earlier this week.

Terri Miller, president of theAlberta Association of Community Peace Officers, said that order gave the officers the ability to enforce the public health act while working in tandem with local police and Alberta Health.

"Once the ministerial order is removed, their ability to enforce under that public health act is also removed," Miller said. "So the onus would fall back on local police agencies, such as the RCMP."

Some Alberta peace officers no longer have the authority to enforce COVID-19 rules under the public health act after the expiration of a ministerial order. (Mike Symington/CBC)

Municipal bylaws in effect due to the COVID-19 pandemic aren't affected by the announcement.

The Alberta government initially gave municipal peace officers the power to fine people under the public health act in March of last year. Those powers were rescinded when the province cancelled the public health emergency.

The orderissued Nov. 27gave peace officers the power to fine a second time, andcontained a sunset clause that allowed it to expire after 90 days.


WestJet reaches tentative agreement with union that represents more than 3,100 cabin crew

WestJet says it has reached atentative agreement withtheCanadian Union of Public Employees on afirst collective agreement that would cover more than 3,100 cabin crew if ratified.

CUPE has represented cabin crew at Calgary-based WestJet Airlines Ltd.since 2018and has engaged the companyin collective bargaining towarda union contract since April 2019.

An Air Canada plane is driving on a runway underneath a WestJet plane that is taking off in front of a mountain range.
WestJet has reached a tentative deal with cabin crews represented by CUPE. (Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press)

In a statement,CUPE Local 4070 president Chris Rauenbuschcharacterized the news as a "monumental task" given COVID-19 travel restrictions and layoffs.

"[This is] an unprecedented achievement at the height of trying times for our industry," he said.

The union and the company now will await a ratification vote from the membership. In a statement, Ed Sims, WestJet's president and CEO, said he was pleased with the development.


Pandemic spending derails Alberta government's plan for balanced budget

Fixated on bolstering the health-care system during the COVID-19 pandemic, Alberta's United Conservative Party government has postponed its promise of a fiscal reckoning to a later, undetermined time.

A government that one year ago insisted the province had a spending problem will now raise Alberta's planned expenses by eight per cent compared to last year, proposing nearly $62 billion in spending for 2021-22.

Finance Minister Travis Toews said Alberta's situation has changed dramatically, and so should the government's plans.

Alberta Finance Minister Travis Toews speaks at a news conference at the legislature Thursday. (CBC)

"I'm not happy with COVID-19 and the pandemic, and having to deal with the resulting economic challenges of the province," Toews said at a Thursday news conference before tabling the budget.

"This is where we find ourselves, and we have to adjust to make sure that we're delivering the most competent, responsible governance possible."

Among the planned spending this year is a $1.25-billion contingency fund to respond to COVID-19, which includes vaccination rollout.

With an estimated $43.7 billion in revenue, Toews predicted an $18.2-billion deficit in the coming year one of the largest in the province's history.


  • For the latest on what's happening in the rest of Canada and around the world, seehere.

With files from The Canadian Press