B.C. to announce timeline for removing some pandemic restrictions but not vaccine cards - Action News
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British Columbia

B.C. to announce timeline for removing some pandemic restrictions but not vaccine cards

On Tuesday, British Columbia is expected to join most other provinces in announcing a timeline for removing some COVID-19 restrictions but lifting the vaccine card isn't expected to be part of the discussion.

Health Minister Adrian Dix said B.C. won't be following the same path as Ontario and the Prairie provinces

B.C.s vaccine card has been fully in effect since Oct. 24, 2021. (Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press)

On Tuesday afternoon, British Columbia is expected to join most other provinces in announcing a timeline for removing some COVID-19 restrictions but lifting the vaccine card isn't expected to be part of the discussion.

"The B.C. vaccine card is a key part of keeping people safe in British Columbia," said Health Minister Adrian Dix to reporters on Monday, previewing a news conference scheduled for 1:30 p.m. PT Tuesday.

"That's the approach we've taken based on the evidence and I think it has helped us enormously in the last number of months."

Provincial Health Officer Dr. Bonnie Henry said in January that some restrictions, including those around capacity limits and events, could be lifted by Family Dayon Feb.21, Dix noted. And he emphasized that B.C.'s vaccine card mandate was extended to June 30 just three weeks ago.

"If that can be taken off sooner than that, of course, based on the evidence, public health can consider that," he said.

"But that's not one of the things at issue tomorrow."

On Monday, Ontario announced it would be removing its vaccine passport system on March 1, although masking requirements would stay in place.

Manitoba will also be lifting its vaccine passport system on March 1, while Saskatchewan and Alberta have already done so.

Key metrics down

B.C.'s new strategy will be announced as evidence mounts that transmission of COVID-19 has declined since its peak last month.

The total number of people in hospital is down 23 per cent from its peak at the start of the month, with new hospital admissions also lower. Measurements of the virus in Metro Vancouver wastewater facilities are down 30 to 70 per cent from early January, as well.


"I do think all signs are pointing in a good direction," said University of British Columbia professor Sally Otto, the Canada research chair in theoretical and experimental evolution and a member of the B.C. COVID-19 Modelling Group.

At the same time, she said it was difficult to say precisely where the province was on its transmission curve, so it's wise to exercise caution in reopening.

"I hope the province will do a kind of gradually staged reopening," she said.

"The further down this slope we get [before reopening], the lower the hospitalization rates will be."

'Same evidence-based process'

B.C.'s announcement comes after weeks of protests across Canada over vaccine mandates and restrictions remaining in place as the pandemic nears its two-year mark in this country.

Dix declined to directly answer whether he thought other provinces were not "seeking an evidence-based approach" in removing restrictions, but said the province would continue monitoring results in the rest of the country.

"We're going through the same evidence-based process that has helped us up to this point," he said.

"I think you're going to see tomorrow that sort of balanced, thoughtful, science-based approach."

It will be the third time in the pandemic B.C. announces a reopening strategy, with the subsequent debates likely to play out in similar fashionto previous times.

"There are some people that are very much like 'open up now' and others thatwe are throwing under the bus, our elderly and those with health issues," said Otto.

"That's a hard task for governments to balance."