sa国际传媒

Skip to content
Join our Newsletter

Les Leyne: Easing of sa国际传媒 restrictions will be slow and methodical

The sa国际传媒 government will be keeping firm control of any efforts by business and individuals to resume activities now curtailed by health orders. Premier John Horgan said Wednesday it will be a 鈥渟low, methodical phased-in approach.
a10 04302020 john horgan.jpg
Premier John Horgan on Tuesday, announcing a two-week extension for the state of emergency. April 30, 2020

The sa国际传媒 government will be keeping firm control of any efforts by business and individuals to resume activities now curtailed by health orders. Premier John Horgan said Wednesday it will be a 鈥渟low, methodical phased-in approach.鈥 The framework will be unveiled next week, but the actual start date is not yet clear.

Workers and customers in the restaurant industry, one of the hardest-hit sectors, have to have confidence they are safe, he said.

鈥淭he only way we built that confidence is to have a set of common protocols, common guidelines in place.鈥

Such protocols are fully in force at grocery stores and Horgan said measures like them will be the foundation of the plan.

And there will be nothing in the plan about a full reopening of schools. There may be a gradual increase in the small number of students now allowed back in classrooms.

So it appears health restrictions will be in effect for a long time to come, but they may be gradually eased to be less onerous.

As a measure of the control the government will be exerting, the state of emergency was extended Wednesday for at least another two weeks.

Horgan said there are dark indicators the economy will retract. 鈥淭he world has stopped buying, British Columbians have stopped buying.鈥

But there are also good indicators for 2021.

He said sa国际传媒鈥檚 dynamic workforce, tech sector and film industry can come back more quickly than in other places.

The government still has $1.5 billion earmarked for economic stimulus that hasn鈥檛 been used yet and will likely be disbursed this summer and fall.

There are numerous decisions to make on how to adapt to long-term restrictions.

Although Horgan was proud of the fact the construction sector wasn鈥檛 shut down as it was elsewhere, it could be eventually curtailed.

New projects in the pipeline need permits and permits often need public hearings, which are in a state of flux around sa国际传媒 because of the limits on gathering.

Victoria Mayor Lisa Helps said this week every council in sa国际传媒 is waiting for the provincial government to give them marching orders on how to hold those hearings.

Speaking to Greater Victoria Chamber of Commerce CEO Catherine Holt on a webcast, she said it makes no sense for each local government to make up new rules on their own.

She said the Municipal Affairs Ministry has taken some leadership on and 鈥渉opefully there鈥檒l be something that comes out very soon in that regard.鈥 The ministry earlier relaxed the requirement for some hearings on minor development issues.

Even if the restrictions are gradually eased, 鈥渋t鈥檚 going to be a very strange summer with few to no tourists here,鈥 Helps said.

The stalled-out tourism sector will be trying to attract visitors from much closer areas, like the north Island, but it will be a longer term recovery.

She expects a much higher retail space vacancy rate.

鈥淥ne of the things we won鈥檛 notice until they鈥檙e gone are all the festivals that happen.鈥

Jazzfest, Pride Parade, sa国际传媒 Day and other events are cancelled or look unlikely at this point.

鈥淭hose are near term impacts that we鈥檙e going to be feeling even as things start to open up.鈥

Helps also tried to rekindle an idea about homelessness she pitched during her election campaign, in the wake of the weekend move to shut down the Topaz Park and Pandora Avenue camps.

The province has arranged over 300 hotel rooms for people from the camps but also committed to a more permanent solution over time.

Helps said modular housing spread across the region would be a good option.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a real opportunity for the whole region to come together around this.鈥

Vancouver, with seven modular projects, has shown it can work. 鈥淭hey look and feel like regular apartment buildings. They鈥檙e quite beautiful actually.鈥

The province erected them when civic land was made available. Helps pondered: 鈥淐an we get each local government across the region to take one building and see how that goes?鈥

Holt said the chamber endorses that idea, as it did View Royal鈥檚 support for using the former youth detention centre as housing.

[email protected]