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Ontario to announce on Wednesday when schools will reopen

Ontario will announce on Wednesday when its schools will reopen, according to Education Minister Stephen Lecce.

'We want all students in all regions back to class,' education minister says

Ontario Minister of Education Stephen Lecce speaks during the daily updates regarding COVID-19 at Queen's Park in Toronto on Tuesday, June 9, 2020.
Ontario Minister of Education Stephen Lecce says he will announce on Wednesday the dates of when schools will reopen in the province. (Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press)

Ontario will announce on Wednesday when its schools will reopen, according to Education Minister Stephen Lecce.

That's when the province'schief medical officer of health will finalize his advice on the matter, Lecce said in a tweet on Monday.

"We want all students in all regions back to class," Lecce said.

"The Government will provide certainty parents deserve by announcing on Wednesday the dates for reopening

Earlier on Monday, Lecce said the provinceis expanding COVID-19 testing for studentsand that it will allow school boards to bring in student teachers to fill supply roles as more schools reopen amid the second wave of the pandemic.

Officials said the targeted testing will be available in all public health units where students havereturned to class. They said they expect that Ontario can complete upto 25,000 laboratory-processed and 25,000 on-site, rapid antigen tests per week but offered no timeline on how long it could take to get to that level.

The testing will be voluntary for both students and staff, officials said.

The Ministry of Education previously carried out about 9,000 targeted tests in some schools in Toronto, Ottawa, Peel andYork regions between Nov. 26 and Dec. 18.

Chief Medical Officer of Health Dr. David Williams said the province recently worked with the manufacturer of the rapid antigen tests to approve a less-intrusive swab for young children, who sometimes struggle with the conventionalnasopharyngealmethod.

Expansion of the testing program accompanies the injection of another $381-million Ottawa recently released as part of Phase 2 of the Federal Safe Return to Class Fund. A previous $381-million in federal funds for school reopenings came last August.

That money will be put toward health and safety in schools, and the development of summer and online learning materials and mental health supports, among a host of additional priorities, Lecce said at a news conference.

WATCH | Williams discussescriteria for reopening schools:

More Ontario children may return to school soon, health official says

4 years ago
Duration 1:24
Falling COVID-19 case numbers in hard-hit Ontario communities and increased testing of students could help more schools open by Feb. 10, says Dr. David Williams, Ontario's chief medical officer of health.

Meanwhile, the province is temporarilychangingits teacher certification program to allow about 2,000 student teachers to fill supply roles.

The teacher candidates must be enrolled in,and have successfully completed a portion of, a current teaching program. They must also be scheduled to complete their program by Dec. 31.

Last fall, the province allowed boards to bring on retired teachers and principals as they looked to reduce average class sizes.

To date, more than 500,000 students in 19of Ontario's 34 public health units have been given a green light to return to classrooms. That includes those in the Middlesex-London and Ottawa, where in-person instruction restarted on Monday.

The nextwave of students, from Toronto, Peel, York Region, Windsor-Essex and Hamilton, are currently scheduled to return on Feb. 10.

Earlier, when asked if that return date is a certainty, Lecce said only that he hopes to have all students back in school as soon as it is safe.

Williams said COVID-19trends in the province suggest that transmission rates are falling in some of the hardest-hit regions, and that he is hopeful the Feb. 10 return will happen. He said local medical officers of health will have a say in whether a given region reopensschools.

In a recent letter to Lecce and Minister of Health Christine Elliott, regional health officialscalled on the province toprioritize opening schoolsbefore lifting other public health restrictions aimed at reducing high levels of COVID-19 infection and hospitalizations from the illness.

"Upon careful review and consideration of local indicators, we believe it is possible, and in fact, imperative, that schools begin to open before the reopening of other sectors, as the stay-at-home orders are lifted provincially," wrote Dr. Paul Roumeliotis, chair of the Council of Ontario Medical Officers of Health.

"Safe reopening of all schools in Ontario is essential."

Transmission risk low, says CDC

The letter, dated last Friday, cited guidance from Toronto's Hospital for Sick Children that flagged "harms of prolonged school closures" and recommended daily in-person classrooms be "the last to close and the first to open."

It also noted a recent paper from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that showed transmission risk within schools was low, with mask requirements and student cohorting in place.

Ontario introducednew safety measures in schools this winter including masking for Grades 1 to 3 though debate continues about whether the measuresare adequate.

A provincewide lockdownbegan on Dec. 26, and it was supplemented with a stay-at-home earlier this month.

The measures appear to have, at least in part, curbed transmission of the virus. The seven-day average of new daily cases of COVID-19 in Ontario has been in steady decline since its peak on Jan. 11, and hospitalizations have slowed.

Revised models published last week, however, cautioned that variants of the virus could become dominant by mid-March.

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