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Doug Ford disputes report that Ontario is sitting on $12B in cash reserves

Premier Doug Ford is pushing back at an independent watchdog’s report that found Ontario was sitting on $12 billion in cash — money that opposition parties say should have been used to fight the pandemic.

The province’s Financial Accountability Office said the government had $12 billion that was not allocated at the end of the second quarter Sept. 30, but Ford countered that all but $2.6 billion has now been earmarked.

It is available in the event of unexpected expenses, particularly with the COVID-19 vaccine which is about to be distributed and injected into millions of Ontarians in the coming weeks and months, the premier said.

“We actually have some money in contingency … because as we went through this pandemic we’ve seen things pop up,” he told the legislature’s last daily question period of the year.

The House adjourned two days early for its winter break until Feb. 16.

Active cases of COVID-19 remain at record levels, although the province reported 1,676 new infections Tuesday, down from the all-time high of 1,925 the previous day as Toronto and Peel Region began their third week in lockdown.

That tally marked the lowest number of new daily infections in two weeks, but hospital admissions for the virus soared by 69 people to levels not seen since late May. There were 10 more deaths.

Closures of non-essential businesses and lost jobs make it imperative for the government to spend more on direct supports, rent relief and paid sick days so workers with potential symptoms can afford to stay home, said NDP deputy leader Sara Singh.

She accused Ford of “hoarding money and waiting for a vaccine,” adding that “working families in hot spots like Brampton can’t sit back and just wait for a vaccine.”

Green Leader Mike Schreiner said the Progressive Conservative government should have used more of the $12 billion in the summer on improved testing, contact tracing and smaller class sizes to mitigate the effects of the second wave COVID-19 that began in September.

“Those are the actions we needed to take to contain the virus and now we’re paying the consequences,” he told reporters. “Ontario is playing catch-up with a virus that is spreading at record levels.”

Cases grew so quickly this fall contact tracers in Toronto could not keep up.

The Ontario Chamber of Commerce backed the NDP’s call for 10 personal emergency leave days in a private member’s bill called the Stay Home If You Are Sick Act from London West MPP Peggy Sattler.

She proposes seven of them be paid and calls for another 14 days of paid leave during any infectious disease emergency.

“For months, public health experts have been calling for paid sick leave to help slow the spread of COVID-19,” Sattler said, noting an estimated 60 per cent of workers do not have paid sick days.

But the Chamber of Commerce said government funding is needed to cover the costs of the proposal, calling it “the right thing to do.”

“Businesses, particularly small businesses, simply cannot afford the additional financial responsibility to fund sick leave at this time,” the organization said in a statement.

Ford cancelled the previous Liberal government’s paid sick day legislation after taking office in 2018.

After months of rising cases, Ontario now has 794 patients in hospital with COVID-19, double the level of a month ago with at least 219 in intensive care and 132 of them on ventilators.

The increasing ICU admissions have “potentially devastating consequences” for people awaiting non-emergency surgeries, procedures and tests because they crowd out non-COVID patients, said the Ontario Hospital Association and groups representing registered nurses, doctors and respiratory therapists.

Rob Ferguson is a Toronto-based reporter covering Ontario politics for the Star. Follow him on Twitter:

York Region hospitals ask for public’s help as surging COVID-19 cases put region at ‘tipping point’

York Region residents received a stark warning this afternoon: the region’s three local hospitals have reached a ‘tipping point’ in the battle against COVID-19.

CEOs from Mackenzie Health, Markham Stouffville and Southlake Regional hospitals sent out a joint statement Dec. 8 raising the alarm over significant increases in the number of patients being admitted for COVID-19.

“We are concerned about how this may impact access to care like scheduled surgeries for all patients across our communities,” the statement said.

The CEOs are calling on the entire community to step up to slow the spread.

“Our staff, physicians and volunteers are doing everything they can to continue providing exemplary care to patients and their families, but the mounting pressure from COVID-19 is taking a toll.”

York Region has consistently ranked among the four worst-hit regions in the province, but when Toronto and Peel were put in the strictest “Grey Zone” Nov. 23.

The region instead asked to stick with “Red-Zone-Plus” restrictions and of COVID-19 precautions.

Numbers have continued to rise to record levels. Public health reported 193 new confirmed cases and four additional fatalities Dec. 8 and the hospital administrators say the region is precariously close to lockdown, too.

“Social gatherings and close social interactions with people outside of our household will push us over the edge,” Jo-anne Marr, president and CEO of Markham Stouffville Hospital, warned in a Toronto Star guest column. “It will continue to force the closure of businesses and schools and it is putting an incredible burden on health-care services and providers.”

The joint statement, signed by Marr, Altaf Stationwala, president and CEO of Mackenzie Health, and Arden Krystal, president and CEO of Southlake, said that more than ever, they are relying on communities to be vigilant in following public health guidance — always wearing a mask in public when distancing isn’t possible, and avoiding social gatherings.

“We recognize that avoiding social gatherings, especially during the holidays, is a personal sacrifice, but we need to do whatever we can to help protect our entire community and maintain access to our health care services,” the statement said.

Words of encouragement, cards, posters, donations and drive-bys, have “meant the world” to health care workers, the CEOs said.

“We are counting on our communities to help keep our staff, physicians and volunteers safe so they can continue to care for everyone who relies on us for care, for COVID-related illness as well as non-COVID-related illnesses and emergencies.”

At Southlake, 79-per-cent of the hospital’s critical care beds were occupied as of Dec. 7.

Wearing masks, washing hands and physical distancing will help to avoid cancelling surgical procedures during a time when Southlake’s capacity is already a challenge, hospital spokesperson Kathryn Perrier said.

Mackenzie Health’s critical care capacity is at 87-per-cent full, a hospital spokesperson said in an email.

“It’s important to note that the increased overall COVID-19 burden in our hospital impacts more than our critical care capacity. It also has an effect on our ability to perform scheduled procedures and surgeries and our ability to provide the level of care we want to continue providing to our community.”

It’s not just the number of patients requiring hospitalization that hospitals are concerned about, but the number of cases circulating in the community, Dr. Karim Kurji, York Region’s medical officer of health, said.

Kurji said he works closely with the three hospital presidents and they suggested this joint statement as another strategy to try to get the message out to the public.

“By and large, the public has been quite compliant, but the numbers were still going up,” he said.

Numbers peaked about three days ago and this is having an impact on hospitals, with more patients requiring care, more in ICU (not all patients from York Region), and more health-care staff members contracting the virus, too.

Kurji said hospital capacity is of paramount importance when it comes to whether or not the province puts the region into lockdown.

Like many institutions, health-care workers in hospitals — and paramedics in particular — are catching COVID-19 in the community, he said.

As the number of cases in the community continues to rise, so does the risk of health-care providers or their family members getting sick, requiring isolation, and reducing the number of paramedics and health care workers available to help out.

This leads to further strain on the health-care system, he said.

York Region released the latest tally of charges in its ongoing COVID-19 enforcement campaign late Tuesday, announcing 61 charges were laid against residents and businesses between Nov. 20 and Dec. 6 — 18 issued by public health, two by the Town of Aurora, 11 by the City of Markham and 30 by the City of Vaughan.

Kurji recommended to York Region council last month that increased enforcement and education could help the region put off a lockdown by the province, but he said it’s not likely to avoid it altogether.

“I have been trying to buy some time, because I felt that the steps being taken would result in reduced numbers of cases,” he said “These are very difficult decisions and right now, we have everything very much in the balance in terms of the province probably recommending intervention.

“Our numbers will be the ultimate decider. If our numbers keep going down over the next few days, it might buy us a bit more time, but I think our latitude for asking for more time is diminishing by the day.”

In the meantime, and until vaccines arrive, Kurji said it’s extremely important to push case numbers down to reduce the impact on hospitals and COVID-19 deaths.