Saturday, June 20, 2026
ADVT 
National

BC Greens call for stricter measures on COVID-19

Darpan News Desk BC Greens, 08 Apr, 2021 05:37 PM
  • BC Greens call for stricter measures on COVID-19

Since the beginning of April, more than 6,000 British Columbians have tested positive with COVID-19. As we navigate the third wave of this pandemic, many are looking to government for transparency and decisive action. 

“Earlier this spring, I said it felt like government was not rising to the fight in light of rising case numbers. Now it is feeling like they are forfeiting the fight altogether,” said Sonia Furstenau, leader of the B.C. Green Party and MLA for Cowichan Valley. “We were not dealt a bad hand - we loosened restrictions despite rising variant cases, allowed out-of-province travel, stalled in-school mask mandates, and did not enforce orders or tailor messaging to hit those who have not been following orders. This third wave is the outcome of that inaction. 

“Neither the methods nor the messaging are working. It cannot only be up to individuals to deal with this crisis. We need a coordinated response and action from government that shows they are taking the immediate and long-term threat of COVID-19 seriously.  

“Variants of concern will soon make up the majority of our cases. Government needs to explain why they are not adapting to the changing reality of this virus by tailoring their vaccination rollout to target young people. Instead of tolerating high rolling averages, we should adopt a COVID zero strategy. 

“British Columbians are angry, they are anxious, and they are scared. It is not enough to ask those who are still listening to get through the next couple of months. We urgently need a shift in government response. Instead of bracing for the impact of rising variants, we can mitigate it right now.

“British Columbians are looking for leadership, not complacency. It is time for the NDP to take ownership of the immense power they hold. They must take responsibility for our pandemic response, be willing to take bold action, and make the tough calls to protect all British Columbians.

The B.C. Green Caucus is calling on government to urgently adopt the following measures:

  • Create a clear and targeted shutdown strategy for a three-week period that includes:
    • Enforcing non-essential travel measures. 
    • Moving school online for most students.
    • Providing immediate government support to temporarily close non-essential businesses.
  • Increase transparency and revamp public communications by:
    • Resuming daily COVID-19 briefings.
    • Publishing case numbers on weekends and holidays.
    • Extending media availability.
    • Adopting new messaging outside of press conferences to target non-compliers.
  • Increase testing and vaccination capacity by:
    • Expanding asymptomatic testing and rapid testing in workplaces, schools, businesses, and neighbourhoods.
    • Improving reporting on variants of concern. 
    • Increasing staffing at vaccination clinics and extending hours to administer all doses as soon as they arrive in province. 

“We need to step up and fight for the health of our province. If we do this now, and do this right, we will all be stronger for it in the near future.” 

MORE National ARTICLES

3 new COVID-19 deaths in B.C. for 81 total, says provincial health officer

3 new COVID-19 deaths in B.C. for 81 total, says provincial health officer
B.C's provincial health officer says three more people in the province have died after testing positive for COVID-19. Dr. Bonnie Henry says the latest deaths came from long-term care facilities and bring the province's total up to 81 deaths. The province has 29 new cases for a total of 1,647.

3 new COVID-19 deaths in B.C. for 81 total, says provincial health officer

Liberals pledge financial aid to sectors of economy hit hard by COVID-19

Liberals pledge financial aid to sectors of economy hit hard by COVID-19
On Friday, the Liberals announced $1.7 billion to help clean up "orphaned wells" in oil-producing provinces, and a $750-million fund to cut methane emissions by providing loans to companies.    

Liberals pledge financial aid to sectors of economy hit hard by COVID-19

Officials set to release estimates of the extent of COVID-19 spread in B.C.

British Columbia is preparing to release its latest estimates of how the new coronavirus may spread through the province over the coming months. Provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry, Health Minister Adrian Dix and health ministry officials release the epidemiological modelling later today.

Officials set to release estimates of the extent of COVID-19 spread in B.C.

Chief public health officer's decisions must be scrutinized: Scheer refuses to express confidence in Tam

Chief public health officer's decisions must be scrutinized: Scheer refuses to express confidence in Tam
Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer refused Thursday to express confidence in Canada's chief public health officer, arguing the need to question her decisions around the COVID-19 pandemic is one of the reasons Parliament must resume. The four main parties in the House of Commons are locked in negotiations to determine if and how Parliament resumes on Monday, the deadline set for it to reconvene following its adjournment in mid-March.

Chief public health officer's decisions must be scrutinized: Scheer refuses to express confidence in Tam

Vancouver Aquarium could face closure due to COVID-19

The Vancouver Aquarium says it is facing bankruptcy and could be forced to close permanently if it can't arrange emergency funding. A statement from the facility says animal care and habitat costs for 70,000 animals exceed $1 million a month but revenues have dropped to almost zero since the COVID-19 outbreak forced it close last month.    

Vancouver Aquarium could face closure due to COVID-19

Fluevog designs 'The Dr. Henry' shoe inspired by B.C. provincial health officer

Provincial Health Officer Dr. Bonnie Henry is adding another title to her long list of credentials — shoe muse. John Fluevog Shoes is launching a limited edition shoe called "The Dr. Henry," inspired by the public health official. The Vancouver designer says the pink-heeled tribute was made with Henry's blessing, and all proceeds from a pre-sale set to begin next week will be donated to Food Banks BC to support the fight against COVID-19.

Fluevog designs 'The Dr. Henry' shoe inspired by B.C. provincial health officer