Monday, June 8, 2026
ADVT 
National

Hajdu sends warning letter to Alberta counterpart

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 Aug, 2021 09:48 AM
  • Hajdu sends warning letter to Alberta counterpart

Federal Health Minister Patty Hajdu has sent a letter to her Alberta counterpart saying she shares concerns about the province's plan to lift all of its COVID-19 health restrictions.

In the letter, addressed to Alberta Health Minister Tyler Shandro, Hajdu says she agrees with the Canadian Paediatric Society's description of the move as an "unnecessary and risky gamble."

She says recent modelling for Alberta forecasts a more serious resurgence in cases fuelled by the Delta variant, and all governments need to take reasonable steps to protect Canadians.

"The vaccination campaign in Canada, one of the best in the world, has significantly changed the overall context of COVID-19 here ... However, it is still too early to declare victory," writes Hajdu.

"Many remain unvaccinated, creating the potential for outbreaks, and we need to increase first and second dose coverage in order to protect against a Delta-driven resurgence that could seriously impact our citizens and our health system capacity."

Hajdu says she wants to better understand the rationale and science behind Alberta's decision.

Last week, the province ended contract tracing and said close contacts of people who test positive for COVID-19 are not required to isolate. And starting Aug. 16, those infected will no longer need to quarantine.

Shandro and Premier Jason Kenney have said Alberta's chief medical health officer, Dr. Deena Hinshaw, came up with the plan to remove restrictions and that it is backed by science and data. They have not released that data other than pointing to vaccine uptake. About 66 per cent of eligible Albertans have been fully vaccinated.

Brett Boyden, a spokesman for Shandro, said in a statement that Hinshaw has been "very clear on the sound medical reasoning behind her decisions."

In a recent editorial, Hinshaw apologized for causing some Albertans "confusion, fear or anger" but said eliminating testing, isolation and contact tracing will help support the whole health of Albertans.

Boyden added that Hinshaw also frequently communicates with her federal counterparts.

MORE National ARTICLES

Virus risk drops after one vaccine dose: B.C.

Virus risk drops after one vaccine dose: B.C.
The agency says in a statement that research led by Dr. Danuta Skowronski, the head of its influenza and emerging respiratory pathogens team, came to the conclusion after analyzing COVID-19 cases in long-term care homes.

Virus risk drops after one vaccine dose: B.C.

BC man charged by Alberta investigators for allegedly uploading sexual pictures of his own daughter

BC man charged by Alberta investigators for allegedly uploading sexual pictures of his own daughter
Following up on a tip, that was initially submitted to the Internet Child Exploitation (ICE) team based in Calgary, investigators were able to identify a B.C. suspect allegedly uploading child sexual abuse materials online.

BC man charged by Alberta investigators for allegedly uploading sexual pictures of his own daughter

Trudeau pledges more funding for vaccines abroad

Trudeau pledges more funding for vaccines abroad
The announcement comes as British Prime Minister Boris Johnson hosts Justin Trudeau and their G7 counterparts for a virtual leaders' summit aimed at bringing renewed momentum to COVID-19 vaccine distribution.

Trudeau pledges more funding for vaccines abroad

PM brushes off provincial defiance on handgun bans

PM brushes off provincial defiance on handgun bans
Trudeau says federal officials will have conversations with municipalities seeking handgun controls even if their provincial leaders oppose such bans.

PM brushes off provincial defiance on handgun bans

COVID variants may push cases to 20K/day by March

COVID variants may push cases to 20K/day by March
The Public Health Agency of Canada released modelling Friday suggesting that while infections continue to decline nationally, the spread of virus mutations threatens to reverse that progress.

COVID variants may push cases to 20K/day by March

Extra weeks to be added to COVID benefits, PM says

Extra weeks to be added to COVID benefits, PM says
Trudeau also says the federal sickness benefit will be expanded to four weeks from two so workers can stay home if they're feeling ill, or have to isolate because of COVID-19.

Extra weeks to be added to COVID benefits, PM says