Sunday, December 28, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. may not move to Step 4 as cases rise: doctor

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Aug, 2021 12:00 AM
  • B.C. may not move to Step 4 as cases rise: doctor

British Columbia's top doctor says the province may not advance as expected to the next step in its COVID-19 restart plan as case counts surge in the Interior Health region.

As provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry was announcing tighter restrictions to cover all of the Interior Health region, she said it won't be a surprise if the province doesn't advance to Step 4 in September.

Henry announced restrictions currently in place in the central Okanagan, such as mandatory mask wearing and reduced limits on indoor and outdoor events, will be expanded across the region in an effort to limit the rise in COVID-19 cases.

The province has seen a surge in COVID-19 cases in recent weeks, with many occurring in the Interior Health region, which Henry and Health Minister Adrian Dix attributed to lower vaccination rates.

Henry says the displacement of many residents because of the wildfires has made containing COVID-19 especially challenging.

She says the larger caseload is placing too much pressure on local health services, prompting them to widen the safety measures to the entire region.

Roughly 76 per cent of eligible residents have received a COVID-19 dose in Interior Health, dropping to 68 per cent for those who have received both doses, Dix said.

Henry says the province is seeing a high number of transmissions at private events, such as weddings or funerals, in the Interior Health region.

"This is a pre-emptive measure," Henry says. "And it is important for all of us to recognize that we can control the things that we are doing that is transmitting this virus and one of the most important ones is to be immunized."

Dix added that there will be "significant" things that those who refuse vaccinations will not be able to do.

"We can do better and there are issues in parts of Interior Health," he said.

"It's time for people to get vaccinated."

MORE National ARTICLES

NDP plan to slash student debt would cost $4B: PBO

NDP plan to slash student debt would cost $4B: PBO
The New Democrats' campaign-style pledge this spring promised to cancel up to $20,000 in tuition, freeze loan payments through July 2022 and scrap interest payments, among other measures.

NDP plan to slash student debt would cost $4B: PBO

Parks Canada adapts to COVID-19 as camping starts

Parks Canada adapts to COVID-19 as camping starts
Parks have brought in some of their own measures as well to try to keep campers safe while enjoying the outdoors. "There will be, in different parks, different kinds of services," Wilkinson said.

Parks Canada adapts to COVID-19 as camping starts

$50M fund to support B.C. anchor attractions

$50M fund to support B.C. anchor attractions
Premier John Horgan and Tourism Minister Melanie Mark said they believe the $50-million BC Major Anchor Attractions Program is enough to prevent any of those not-for-profits and businesses on the edge from going under.

$50M fund to support B.C. anchor attractions

B.C. Mounties say homicide victims were brothers

B.C. Mounties say homicide victims were brothers
The RCMP say they are releasing the names of 29-year-old Erick Fryer and 31-year-old Carlos Fryer in an effort to help their investigation. They say the bodies of the two men from Kamloops, B.C., were found by a couple walking in a remote area around Naramata Creek north of Penticton.

B.C. Mounties say homicide victims were brothers

B.C. may accelerate delivery of second doses

B.C. may accelerate delivery of second doses
In a statement, the province says with a large and steady vaccine supply after most people have had their first jab, officials will be able to consider how they might be able to accelerate the delivery of second shots.

B.C. may accelerate delivery of second doses

Vancouver cops hope DNA might solve boys' murder

Vancouver cops hope DNA might solve boys' murder
Sgt. Steve Addison said advancements in science, in combination with people's interest in learning about their ancestry, have opened a door to discovering who may have killed two boys, ages seven and eight.

Vancouver cops hope DNA might solve boys' murder