Kootenays struggle with dramatic rise in cases of COVID-19 - Action News
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British Columbia

Kootenays struggle with dramatic rise in cases of COVID-19

Nelson Mayor John Dooley is calling on the local health authority to reimpose basic pandemic protections to stave off harsher measures.

'We're staring down the barrel': Nelson mayor

Nelson, B.C. and the Kootenay region are struggling with dramatically increasing COVID-19 cases and infection rates. (hellobc.com)

Struggling with a record and rising number of COVID-19 cases, Nelson's mayor worries the Kootenays will follow the Central Okanagan as a centre of B.C.'s fourth wave.

"If this trend continues, I would be surprised if there isn't a shutdown at some point," said John Dooley."We're staring down the barrel."

Dooley worries lives and livelihoods are at stake if surginginfection rates in the region don't subside.

"A lot of businesses are very, very, worried they can't survive a new shutdown," he said.

At least a half dozen Nelson restaurants have already voluntarily closed in recent weeks because of staff exposures.

'We are concerned about this'

Interior Health says the same factors driving COVID infection in the Okanaganare sweeping through the Kootenay region.

"We have seen a significant increase in the number of cases and the rate of COVID-19 infections in the Nelson area." saidDr. Karin Goodison, medical health officer with Interior Health.

A total of 187 cases have been reported in the area since July 1, when restrictions were lifted. It is the highest case count, and COVID infection rate since the pandemic began.

Interior heath confirms there is community infectionbeyond isolatedclusters. The highly infectious delta variant has alsoemerged as the clearly dominant strain.

The health authority says just over half of thoseinfected are between the ages of 18 and 49. It says only 50 per cent of that age group in the region are fully vaccinated.

"The recommendation, the very strong recommendation, is that people are to mask [and] we want to encourage immunization.It is the most effective intervention,"said Goodison.

She says pandemic restrictions will onlybe imposed if the situation demands it.

'It'salmost like a false sense of security'

Dooley is now calling on Interior Health to reimpose basic restrictions.

"The masking should definitely come back," hesaid.

He says It's why the city is unilaterally mandating masks in all its municipal properties.

Dooley says the B.C. government's restart plan has createdcomplacency.

"When we opened up, Ithink it sort of took the urgency out of the situation.

"The vaccine numbers dropped almost immediately. By taking away those restrictions, we allowed people to think we're OKnow. And you know what? We're finding we're not OKnow."