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Montreal

Follow the COVID-19 rules or you'll be fined, Quebec Premier Legault warns

Quebec sent an alert using the emergency alert system, to remind people to follow the COVID-19 rules or face the consequences as cases and hospitalizations in the province continue to rise.

'We cannot allow a minority of people to put the majority at risk,' Legault said

Police forces and health and safety inspectors will be instructed to issue more fines in the coming days, Franois Legault says, in a bid to get people to follow the rules. (Jacques Boissinot/The Canadian Press)

Premier Franois Legault says the time for warnings is over Quebec will be cracking down on those who flout COVID-19 health and safety rules in the coming days.

The province sent an alert at 2:30 p.m. Wednesday, using the emergency alert system, to remind people to follow the rules.

Police and inspectors from the province's workplace safety board will be instructed to issue tickets, which can go up to $6,000, to individuals and businesses that break the laws, Legault said.

People must stay two metres from each other and wear a mask when they are in stores.Stores, based on their size, must limit the number of customers. And in red zones, only people who live alone are allowed to have a visitor intheir home.

"We cannot allow a minority of people to put the majority at risk," Legault said.

Quebec used the emergency alert system Wednesday to notify Quebecers that tougher enforcement of COVID-19 health and safety rules is coming. (The Canadian Press)

The premier urged Quebecers to reduce their contacts, saying there are too many people with COVID-19 in hospital. The province reported just over 1,700 new cases on Wednesday, and 844 people are hospitalized.

The high number of hospitalizations has had a trickle down effect, he said, as hospitals have scaled back surgeries and other treatments in recent days.

The idea of imposing wide-scale closures over the holiday period to stop the virus from spreading has been gaining steam in recent days, as the cases keep climbing.

Legault reiterated that while he isn't ruling out imposing further restrictions, he is not there yet. He said whether things get to that point is largely contingent on whetherQuebecers follow the rules.

In order to help people reduce their contacts,Legaultonce again encouraged any businesses that can close from Dec. 17 to Jan. 4to do so.

Vaccination plan moves ahead

Health Canada regulatorsgave the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine the green lightWednesday, paving the way for the start ofQuebec's vaccination campaign.

Fiveboxesof the vaccine will arrive at two long-term care homes in Montreal and Quebec City Monday, where the residents and employees will be the first in the province to be immunized.

Health Minister Christian Dub said, as of Dec. 21, vaccinations will begin at other long-term care homes, which will account for about half of the 20 sites that Pfizer has authorized to receive doses of the vaccine.

The other sites are distribution centres that are attached to hospitals. The sites were chosen because they will beequipped with the cold storage needed to keep the vaccine at the required 80 C to 60 C.

The vaccine's storage specifications are a key reason why, at the moment, Pfizer-BioNTechis not allowing the doses to be transported away from the designated sites.

But Dub said the company would be open to revising that directiveonce the vaccinations begin, if all goes well.

"It's up to us to prove to Pfizer, and I can tell you, we will prove it to them, that we can receive more [vaccine doses] than they're ableto send us because we're ready," he said.

Quebec expects to immunize 650,000 people by March 31.