B.C. mayor wants mandatory masks, more details from province about location of COVID-19 cases - Action News
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British Columbia

B.C. mayor wants mandatory masks, more details from province about location of COVID-19 cases

Cindy Fortin, a former nurse and the mayor of Peachland, is worried residents are not taking as strict precautions to protect themselves and others as they were at the onset of the pandemic, and would like to make masks mandatory in her municipality.

Peachland Mayor Cindy Fortin is worried people are becoming less vigilant as the pandemic stretches on

In order to enforce the wearing of masks in public, the District of Peachland would have to declare a local state of emergency but such municipal declarations are overridden by the ongoing provincial state of emergency, Peachland Mayor Cindy Fortin says. (Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press)

The mayor of an Okanagan community is worried people are slipping in their vigilance to protect themselves and others from COVID-19 and would like to make masks mandatory in her municipality.

Cindy Fortin, mayor of Peachland, said it's time the province gave municipalitiesback some power over how they look after their residents during the pandemic.

Fortin says she is "frustrated and really worried" about some of the lackadaisical behaviour she is witnessing in her district such as a lack of face masks and physical distancing compared to what she saw at the onset of the pandemic.

In order to enforce the wearing of masks in public, Fortin said the District of Peachland would have to declare a local state of emergency and create a bylaw.

But on a recent bi-weekly phone call with other B.C. mayors and representatives from the province,Fortin was toldthat any municipal states of emergency were overridden when the B.C. government declared a provincewide state of emergency in March.

"Ithink it's time to let the community leaders take a little bit more charge of what they do in their communities," Fortin said Monday on CBC'sRadio West.

Call for more case specifics

Fortin would also like the province to be more forthcoming about the exact location where people who have tested positive forCOVID-19 are living. Shebelieves this will prevent people from thinking the virus is something abstract that is happening elsewhere.

"When they can't actually hear that it is happening in their own backyard, then they don't seem to feel as affected by it or see it as urgent," said Fortin, adding how worrying it was tosee an outbreak stemming from events around Canada Dayin nearby Kelowna.

She said even as a mayor, she is not provided with that specific information.

"I think we should know so we can make sure our residents are informed becausewhen people are informed they make better decisions," said Fortin.

As a former nurse, Fortin said she started wearing a mask in February when she realized how serious the spread of the coronavirus that causes COVID-19 could become.

She said she has asked the provincial government what their backup plan is if things take a turn for the worse in B.C., but has not received a straight answer.

As for those in her community who consider the virus to be a hoax or conspiracy, Fortin asks them to consider what the logic would be behind making people and the global economy suffer.

"Leave the politics out of it and wear the mask," said the mayor.

With files from Radio West