Sunday, December 28, 2025
ADVT 
National

Mayor critical of Alberta lifting COVID-19 orders

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Jul, 2021 01:43 PM
  • Mayor critical of Alberta lifting COVID-19 orders

The mayor of Calgary says it's the "height of insanity" that Alberta is moving ahead with removing almost all of its remaining COVID-19 public health orders, even as cases climb in the province.

Alberta has ended isolation requirements for close contacts of people who test positive and contact tracers will no longer notify them of their exposure. The province has also ended asymptomatic testing.

Further measures are to be eliminated Aug. 16. People who test positive will no longer be required to isolate. Isolation hotels will close as quarantine supports end.

"It is inconceivable to me. It is the height of insanity to say we don't even know what's happening," Naheed Nenshi said Thursday.

"It is putting the health of Albertans at risk. To stop contact tracing, to stop testing people for the coronavirus and to become one of the first — if not the first — jurisdictions in the world to say that people who have tested positive, who are infectious, can just go about their lives."

Nenshi, who was making an announcement at the Calgary airport, said if he were in another jurisdiction he would be thinking hard whether to put travel restrictions on Albertans starting Aug. 16.

"I'm aware of no science that backs this up. It is clear for the last month or so on this file (that) our government has been grasping and struggling, just trying to get some good news out of something," he said.

"To say we don't want to know who has the coronavirus, we don't want to track outbreaks. Even the most fervent of the anti-maskers wouldn't say (to) unleash people who are actually infectious into the population."

Nenshi said he worries that the decision to lift the health orders is politically motivated and has nothing to do with science at all.

"The only possible explanation here is a political one. It might be that they've run out of money, but you know what? Don't spend $1.5 billion on a pipeline you know isn't going to get built if you're running out of money."

MORE National ARTICLES

Canada doubles dollar commitment to COVAX

Canada doubles dollar commitment to COVAX
COVAX said last week it needed another $2 billion pledged by today to secure enough vaccines to vaccinate almost one-third of people living in low and middle-income countries.

Canada doubles dollar commitment to COVAX

Peer support needed for military trauma: report

Peer support needed for military trauma: report
Canada's veterans ombudsman says a recent investigation by her office has found victims of military sexual misconduct are being referred away from existing peer-support programs for service members with PTSD and other psychological trauma.

Peer support needed for military trauma: report

B.C. to follow guidelines on mixing vaccines

B.C. to follow guidelines on mixing vaccines
British Columbia health officials say about 70 per cent of eligible adults in the province have received their first dose of a COVID-19 vaccine. Officials say in a news release that they will be following the National Advisory Committee on Immunization guidelines on mixing and matching vaccines.

B.C. to follow guidelines on mixing vaccines

COVID shortened Canadian life expectancy: StatCan

COVID shortened Canadian life expectancy: StatCan
Statistics Canada says it estimates that life expectancy across the country declined by an average of 0.41 years in 2020, adding that the 15,651 deaths caused by COVID-19 contributed to that drop.

COVID shortened Canadian life expectancy: StatCan

Canadian military-goods exports dropped in 2020

Canadian military-goods exports dropped in 2020
Canada's annual report on exports of military equipment says in 2020 it sold approximately $1.966 billion in controlled military goods to international buyers compared to $3.757 billion in 2019.

Canadian military-goods exports dropped in 2020

Residential school survivor breaking silence

Residential school survivor breaking silence
The Kamloops Indian Residential School was Canada's largest such facility operated by the Roman Catholic Church between 1890 and 1969 before the federal government took it over as a day school until 1978, when it was closed.

Residential school survivor breaking silence