3-stage plan could see Alberta fully reopen by July, premier says - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 03:51 PM | Calgary | -10.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Edmonton

3-stage plan could see Alberta fully reopen by July, premier says

The Alberta government has unveiled its three-stage "open for summer" plan, a strategy for lifting health restrictions that is tied directly to vaccination and hospitalization numbers.

'We're leaving the darkest days of the pandemic behind,' Jason Kenney says

Premier Jason Kenney provided an update on COVID-19 and the province's strategy for safely easing restrictions at a news conference in Edmonton on Wednesday, May 26, 2021. The "Open for Summer Plan" provides a three-stage road map to lifting health restrictions and safely getting back to normal. (Chris Schwarz/Government of Alberta)

The Alberta government has unveiled its three-stage "open for summer" plan, a strategy tied directly to vaccination and hospitalization numbers that could see all public-health restrictions lifted by July.

The province will enter Stage 1 on June 1 and is expected to be fully open by the beginning of July or earlier, Premier JasonKenneysaid Wednesday at a news conference.

"We are optimistic that we'll enter Stage 3 by early July," Kenney said. "And what a great day that will be. Events like K-Days and Calgary Stampede can proceed at that point with full participation."

The last 16 months have been "incredibly tough," filled with sacrifices, loss andadapting to sudden changes, Kenney said.

"Today we are truly near the end of this thing," he said. "We're leaving the darkest days of the pandemic behind and stepping into the warm light of summer."

WATCH | Kenney unveils reopening plan:

Alberta premier announces 3-stage plan to lift restrictions

3 years ago
Duration 1:17
Calling it a 'great day,' Alberta Premier Jason Kenney on Wednesday announced a staged 'open for summer plan' to lift COVID-19 restrictions in the province.

Stage 1 requires that 50 per cent of Albertans aged 12 and older have received at least one dose of vaccine, and that COVID-19 hospitalizations be below 800 and declining. Both those thresholds have already been met, Kenney said.

That means, starting on Friday, places of worship will be allowed to open with 15 per cent capacity limit. Starting June 1, the rest of Stage 1 would kick in, which includes:

  • Outdoor gatherings of up to 10 people.
  • Personal and wellness services allowed to reopen.
  • Restaurant patios allowed to reopen.
  • Outdoor sports and recreation for up to 10 people.
  • Retail stores allowed to have up to 15 per cent offire code occupancy.

Stage 2 would begin two weeks after 60 per cent of eligibleAlbertanshave received at least one dose of vaccineand COVID-19 hospitalizations are below 500 and declining.

"Based on our current bookings, we expect to hit that 60 per cent mark sometime this week," Kenney said, "perhaps as early as tomorrow, which puts us on track to start this Stage 2 in mid-June."

Libraries, gyms and theatres

InStage 2, libraries andmovie theatrescouldreopen, places of worship and retail stores couldhave one-third occupancy, restaurants could seatgroups of up to six indoors and outdoors, gyms could reopen and outdoor gatherings could include up to 20 people.

"Some restrictions will be in place [during Stage 2] to continue keeping numbers down, driving them down further, so that we can then safely open up altogether," Kenney said. "But things will really start to look and feel normal again once we reach this stage."

Stage 3 would begin two weeks after 70 per cent of eligibleAlbertans have had at least one dose of vaccine. That stage will not be tied to hospitalization numbers.

"At this stage, most public health restrictions including the ban on indoor social gatherings will be history and we'll be able to enjoy a truly great Albertan summer," Kenney said. "Almost all health restrictions will be gone."

'Crushed it'

The government brought in tougher public health orders in early May, when the province led North America in daily infection rates.

Asked ifthe province was now moving too quickly, Kenney said his government was taking a "cautious approach" and following the science and examples in other countries.

"We've been at this for 16 months with incredibly tough measures that have interrupted people's lives, that have cost a lot of sacrifice and adversity," he said. "So to just maintain these measures indefinitely, when we are beginning to approach population immunity, while the COVID numbers are dropping very quickly would, I think, be irresponsible."

Alberta reported 390 new cases on Wednesday and another six deaths. Provincewide, there were 10,953 active cases, with 548 patients being treated in hospital for the illness, including 157 in ICU beds. Laboratories completed about 6,000 tests.

Kenney said one key metric the province is using the percentage of people with their first doses of vaccine is backed by deeper analysis about what constitutes "population protection," including the 9.2 per cent of people who have been fully vaccinated, and the 14 per cent who have natural immunity because they have recovered from the illness.

Health Minister Tyler Shandrosaid the reopening stages will be implemented in all parts of the province at the same time.

"The scale of Stage 2 reopening might seem daunting, but we must not forget that, in comparison to last year, we have vaccines and the protection that they give us on our side. And on top of that, we will be monitoring hospitalization levels throughout and will not move to the next stage if those numbers give us any reason to have continued caution."