Latest changes to Manitoba COVID-19 restrictions met by both relief and disappointment - Action News
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Manitoba

Latest changes to Manitoba COVID-19 restrictions met by both relief and disappointment

Despite their understanding, some Manitobans feel the province could benefit from further reopening than was announced Tuesday.

Funeral homes, concert halls, movie theatres feel restrictions could have been loosened further

Kevin Sweryd, president of the Manitoba Funeral Service Association, was relieved to hear restrictions will be loosening for his industry, but he believes funeral services can safely expand further. (Walther Bernal/CBC)

Winnipeg funeral director Kevin Swerydsays he was relieved this week to hear that capacity for funerals in Manitoba can increase but he was also somewhat disappointed.

Among other changes topandemic restrictions announced by the Manitoba governmentTuesday, the maximum capacity for funerals,weddings and public outdoor gatherings will increasefrom 10 people to 25, whennew public health orders comeinto effect as of 12:01 a.m. CT Friday.

But Swerydbelieves the funeral industry has the capability to safely expand capacity further especially when places of worship are allowedup to 100 people or 25 per cent capacity, assuming other public health measures are followed.

Retail stores will be allowed to welcome up to 500 people or 50 per cent of maximum capacity, whichever is lower, as of Friday.

"Funeral service [businesses]arestill being held to a very different standard than other businesses that are being allowed to operate with much greater capacity limits and much higher numbers than we are," said Sweryd, who is also president of the Manitoba Funeral Service Association.

WATCH | Relief and disappointment as COVID-19 restrictions change:

Relief and disappointment as Manitoba changes COVID-19 restrictions

4 years ago
Duration 2:10
The latest changes to Manitoba COVID-19 restrictions are met by both relief and disappointment for some businesses. Funeral homes, concert halls and movie theatres feel restrictions could have been loosened further.

"You can go to a church service this coming Sunday at 10 a.m. and you can sit in the sanctuary and worship with 100 people socially distanced with all the right protocols in place. But if you want to go to that same church in the same sanctuary on Monday morning at 10 a.m.then it is only safe to have 10 people in the same building."

Theindustry has faced concernsabout funeral services potentially becoming superspreader events throughout the pandemic.

There is precedent in Canada: most of the confirmed COVID-19 cases reported during Newfoundland and Labrador's first wave were linked to a funeral held in St. John's in March 2020. The"Caul's cluster"became one of the country's first COVID-19 outbreaks.

But Sweryd's association challenged Manitoba's government to show the transmission stemming from funerals here.

"We understand that they may have concerns that people would be in closer contact at funerals, wanting to hug and shake hands. But we believe that we wrote protocols that allow for people to gather without having that happen," he said.

Funeral directors in Manitoba have instituted measures such as having ushersto remind people about physical distancing, implementing staggered entry timesand noting contact information in case contact tracing is needed, he said.

He said he doesn't see such initiatives when he's out grocery shopping.

'Public health has prevailed': Lamont

An online survey launched last week asked Manitobans to weigh in on what restrictions should change and when. Provincial officials debated shifting to the orange, or restricted, level of the province's pandemic response system.

The province announced Tuesday, though, that Manitobawill remain at thered, or critical level the system's highest. The entire province has been at that level since last November.

"I'm quite relieved that public health has prevailed," Manitoba LiberalLeader Dougald Lamont said duringa scrum Tuesday, citing rising COVID-19 cases and confirmed cases of coronavirusvariants in Manitoba.

"I'm glad we've erred on the side of caution."

'I'm glad we've erred on the side of caution,' Manitoba Liberals Leader Dougald Lamont told reporters Tuesday. (Global News)

While outdoor public gatherings will also see maximum capacity increase from 10to 25 people starting Friday, private outdoor gatherings in someone's backyard, for example are still limited to 10 people.

The current rules for designated visitors inside a private residencestill apply. Manitoba households can designate two people as visitors, or enter a bubble with one other household that is allowed to visit.

And though capacity will increase for retailers, Lamontsaidmore business supports are neededhelpindustries that won't benefit from looser restrictions later this week.

He said he has also approached Chief Provincial Public Health Officer Dr. BrentRoussin, the premier and the ministers for health and mental health about expanding capacity restrictions for Alcoholics Anonymous and Narcotics Anonymous meetings.

"During the pandemic, mental health has gotten worse and problem drug and alcohol consumption has gotten worse," said Lamont. "It needs to stay safebut right now it's a real problem."

The new public health order will expire Thursday, April 15.

Theatres, concert halls still closed

The COVID-19 pandemic has forced movie theatres and concert halls in Manitoba to remain closed for most ofthe past year. Theywere able to reopen briefly after the initial lockdown, but have been closed since November.

Officials said last week they were considering allowing indoor theatres and concert halls to reopen with limited capacity, but with Tuesday's announcement,there is still no reopening in sight for those venues.

"It's understandable and it's unfortunate that we won't get that opportunity to expand just yet," said Robert Olson, CEO of the Manitoba Centennial Centre Corporation, which manages venues such as the Centennial Concert Hall and the Royal Manitoba Theatre Centre's two stages.

There would have been no profit made by the operators of venues such as the Centennial Concert Hall, shown here, if the province allowed them to reopen, says the CEO of the Manitoba Centennial Centre Corporation, but it might have helped build public trust. (Jeff Stapleton/CBC)

Manitoba had considered openingtheatresto audiences of up to 250 people, which would have been enough to open the concert hall, said Olson.

There wouldn't have been any profit, but that could have allowed the organization to start building public trust in attending those sorts of venues, he said.

"The province was making a safe bet to open these types of venues at these capacity levels," he said, adding live events need time to book performers. "It wasn't like you could say, 'We'll be open next week,' and then boom on Monday we'd have shows inside the concert hall."

Meanwhile, Cineplex CEO Ellis Jacob is "frustrated and disappointed" by Tuesday's announcement.

"Despite clear results showing that cinemas are demonstrably safer than other indoor venues, the provincial government continues to shutter movie theatres for reasons they won't share with Manitobans,"Jacob said in a news release.

"Cineplex has a proven track record of operating our theatres safely and we, like all Canadians, just want to get back to that."

Jacob says there is no evidence of COVID-19 caseslinked to movie theatres anywhere.

With files from Stephanie Cram