Home | WebMail |

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

Montreal

Does Quebec's March break plan make sense?

Quebec's decision to open cinemas and indoor sports complexes, while keeping theatres and gyms closed, is being questioned by public health experts and other business owners including some who own cinemas.

Public health experts warn against relaxed restrictions; spa, gym owners feel left out

The inability to sell popcorn means the multiplexes operated by Cinmas Guzzo will likely stay closed, said Vincenzo Guzzo, the president and CEO. (Ivanoh Demers/Radio-Canada)

Quebec's decision to open cinemas and indoor sports complexes, while keeping theatres and gyms closed, is being questioned by public health experts and other business owners including some who own cinemas.

Experts say now isnot the time to begin relaxing restrictions, with a third wave a possible consequence.

And people in the theatre industry, as well asgym and spa owners, are confused by the government'slogic that means their businesses must remain closed while others can open up.

However, with curfews still in place 8.p.m in red zones, 9:30 p.m. in orange zones and other restrictions still in effect, even movie theatre owners aren't sure if itwill beworth it to reopen on Feb. 26.

"I can't be losing money [while operating]," saidSylvain Gilbert, general manager of CinmaLido andCinma Des Chutes in Lvis, Que.

He says getting everything ready in 10 days will be a challenge. And withmasks required to be worn at all times, Gilbert says he's losing out on the roughly80 per cent of his profits that come from the sale of popcorn and other snacks.

The inability to sell popcorn means Cinmas Guzzomovie theatres will likely stay closed, said Vincenzo Guzzo, the president and CEO.

On Wednesday afternoon, a group representing several cinemas in the province, including the Guzzo chain, asked the government to consider relaxing the operating rules, or compensate the owners for their losses.

A spokesperson for Cineplex Entertainment, which operates cinemas across the province,said Wednesday they are still studying Quebec's announcement.

Prativa Baral, an epidemiologist and doctoral candidate at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, says movie theatres should not be reopened, given the threat of COVID-19 variants. (CBC)

Preventing third wave should be priority, experts say

By reopening cinemas, indoor pools and rinks, Quebec officials are looking to relievesome of the stress that has come with the government-enforced lockdown, while at the same time giving parents a break from struggling to entertain their kids during school break.

However, reopening cinemas, asCOVID-19 variants are starting to spread is an unnecessary risk, according toPrativa Baral, an epidemiologist with theJohns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

"These variants are not a joke," she said. "The likelihoodof a third wave happening very much depends on whether we act aggressively and very, very strongly in the initialstagewhich is where we are right now."

Indoor gatherings of any kind, including in cinemas, couldundomuch of the progress that's been made in recent weeks, Baral said, with daily COVID-19 case totals dipping below1,000.

Even if the daily data have improved, Dr. Matthew Oughton, an infectious disease specialist at the Jewish General Hospital, says the situation is still worrisome, and the province needs to focus on getting transmissions as low as possible.

"Overall, a third wave, especially of a really transmissible variant, is a much bigger overall burden and cost to our health-care system, to our economy, to our mental health, than getting it under control once and for all," Oughton told CBC Montreal's Daybreak host Sean Henry.

On Tuesday, the premier said police across Quebec will be watching for illegal gatherings in private homes, hotels and cottages during March break, in hopes of limiting outbreaks.

Gyms are among the businesses that will remain closed heading into March. (Ivanoh Demers/Radio-Canada)

Waiting game continues

While the government is allowing some businesses to open, plenty of others remain closed and that has left many feeling left out in the cold.

Eda Holmes, the artistic and executive director of the Centaur Theatre, said the reopening strategy is "frankly, really perplexing."

"If people can sit in a room in a movie theatre, that's exactly what they do when they come to the theatre," she said. "We have all the things in place to welcome them safely."

And Rahul Varma, artistic director of Teesri Duniya Theatre, argued that while films can be watched on any screen, including TVs at home, the live theatre experience can't be replicated.

"It doesn't make sense that cinema can be done safely and theatre can't," he said.

Spa and gym owners are also left scratching their heads at the decision.

"Last summer, there was no outbreak of COVID-19 in our facilities, and we welcomed hundreds of thousands of people," said Vronique Lemieux, president of theAssociation Qubcoise des spas in a statement Tuesday..

Gabriel Hardy, Quebec head of the Fitness Industry Council of Canada, questionsthe government's motivation for keeping gyms closed.

He said the benefits of keeping fit"largely outweigh the risks when they are supervised correctly."

With files from Simon Nakonechny, Annie Deir Sarkissian and CBC Montreal's Daybreak