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Calgary

You may have to keep wearing that mask until the end of next year in Calgary, or face even bigger fines

Calgary city council has boosted fines and extended the city's mandatory mask bylaw untilDecember2021,unless it's repealed sooner.

Fines are going up for violations of city mandate, alongside big fines from province

Calgary's mask bylaw will remain in effect until December 2021, unless it's repealed sooner. (Mathieu Theriault/CBC/Radio-Canada)

Calgary's mandatory mask bylaw will be around untilDecember2021,unless it's repealed sooner.

The bylaw was first introduced in July.

Calgary city council voted Monday to extend the possible deadline for the temporarybylaw at the same time as approving an increase in fines from $50 for a first offence to $100.

A second offence would cost $200 and third and subsequent violations would result intickets of $300.

Provincial tickets for violating the mask health order start at $1,000 and can go as high as $100,000.

Whether a person is in violation of the provincial order or the municipal bylaw depends on the location of the offence andwould be up to the discretion of the officer issuing the ticket and the nature of the violation.

Some councillors wondered why the bylaw, brought in months before the province introduced a mandatory mask bylaw in late November, was still necessary given the new Alberta rules. They were told the two can coexist.

Under the Alberta government rules, masks are mandatoryacross the province in all indoor workplacesand facilities outside the home, exceptwhen working alone in an office or a safely distanced cubicle or a barrier is in place, when inrental accommodations used solely asa private residence or infarm operations.

The city bylaw covers public buildings and transit.

Coun. Druh Farrell wondered why the city fines were so low given the potential deadly nature of the virus.

Kay Choi, manager of strategic services for the city, said that's why it's important to have both levels of fines.

"If there is an egregious violation to the mask order, enforcement officers have the opportunity, or can use, the $1,000 (provincial) minimum fine and that can go up to $100,000 and we think that's a big stick," she said.

"I think what very important is that this bylawallows enforcement agencies an opportunity to use discretion and to scale their enforcement efforts."

Organizers of the anti-mask rallies that have been taking place in Calgary on weekends have received provincial fines for gatherings.

Council voted to ask administration for quarterly updates on the bylaw as the pandemic continues and vaccines trickle into the arms of citizens, but the extension ofthe bylaw means a vote won't be required every three months.

"If we're looking at people in Alberta being fully vaccinated by the fall, then obviously there will be no need for the bylaw at that time," said Mayor Naheed Nenshi.

"But the mask bylaw is probably one of the last things that will be eased in terms of restrictions because it's about preventing further spread. It's about being forward looking, and so I anticipate that we'll see it for a good chunk of 2021 at least."

Alberta plans to administer first doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine to 29,000 health-care workers by the end of December, the province's health minister said Monday.

Starting thisweek,3,900 doseswill go toICU doctors and nurses, respiratory therapists and long-term care workers in a bid to keep both the workers and those under their care safe.

Meanwhile, sweepingnewrestrictionsaimed atslowingthe spread of COVID-19 came into effect in Alberta onSunday at 12 a.m., and are expected to be in place for at leastfour weeks.

Alberta reported1,887 new cases of COVID-19 on Monday and another 15 deaths. Across the province, 716 people are being treated in hospitals for the illness, including 136 in ICU beds.