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Montreal

Quebec to soon lift public masking requirements

The Health Ministry announced that public masking requirements may end by spring.

Vaccine passport no longer required as of March 12

A man wearing a mask, suit and fedora faces a Montreal sign indicating COVID-19 health guidelines.
A man wears a face mask as he looks at a sign illustration COVID-19 preventative measures in Montreal, Saturday, April 24, 2021. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Graham Hughes (Graham Hughes/The Canadian Press)

Quebec will be lifting several public health restrictionsas earlyas March 12, according to the Health Ministry.

A number of health measures were due to be lifted on March 14, including showing a vaccine passport to enter certain venues.

"This is a very important step, and we can be proud of all our efforts to get here," Health Minister Christian Dub said in a statement. "However, we must learn to live with the virus, which is still circulating, and remain cautious."

As of March 12, all public venues may operate at 100 per cent capacity.

Restaurants, bars, taverns and casinos can resume regular business hours without enforcing seating limits at tables. Dancing and karaoke will be permitted once again.

Private seniors' residences will no longer need to keep a registry of visitors.

A QR code is scanned at a Montreal gym last September. The province hopes to phase out use of the passport, for now, starting March 12. (Graham Hughes/The Canadian Press)

Timeline for mask use

The ministry will announce at a later time the exact date masking will no longer be required in public spaces, depending on the epidemiological situation.

"Wearing a mask, even when it is no longer mandatory, will be part of the arsenal we have to reduce the risk of transmission in certain circumstances," Dub said.

The tentative timeline to end masking in public spaces with the exception of public transportation will be implemented no later than mid-April, the statement reads.

The last service that will require a mask will be public transit, but even that requirement is likely to be lifted in May.

CNESSTrule changes

The Health Ministry said masks will continue to be required inworkplaces and health-care settings, such as long-term care homes.

Quebec's workplace health and safety board (CNESST) provided details Wednesday of how workplaces, other than in health care,will evolve.

Starting March 7,minimum physical distancing requirements will dropfrom two metres to one between workers.

Wearing a proper maskwill continue to be mandatory if there is no physical distancing,the board said in a news release Wednesday.

More changes will be made to workplace health rules no later than mid-April following public health's announcement. At that time,wearing a mask in the workplace will no longer be mandatory, but there will be exceptions. Workers must wear masks whenbeing transported by bus orplane.

By May at the earliest,the masking mandate will be liftedinworkplacesand when workers are being transported by bus orplane.

EmileMorand-Boucharlat says he's more comfortable wearing a mask outside for his personal safety and to protect family members who are more vulnerable to COVID-19. (CBC)

Even with the mandates changing, some Quebecerswon't be so quick to ditch their masks.

EmileMorand-Boucharlat, 17, says he'll likely keep wearing one in public because he feels safer with it.

"I guess it's good that we're seeing the end of it," he said."I don't really mind what other people do as long as they don't have COVID and purposefully do not wear a mask."

Utility of vaccine passports

Vincent Marissal,Qubec Solidaire health critic and MNA for Rosemont, welcomed the news of restrictions lifting, but called onthe government to justifythe useof the vaccine passport. Quebec has not ruled outbringing back vaccinepassport andmask mandatesat a later date.

"I asked this week for a scientific report on the usefulness of this tool in the fight against COVID-19," he said in a statement. "We need to have an accurate picture of the effectiveness of the vaccine passport, justified by rigorousscientific criteria."

He also urgedthe government to announce an end to the state of emergency because, he says, it has become"increasingly unjustifiable."

with files from Sharon Yonan Renold