City of Saskatoon postpones return to work plan as COVID numbers increase - Action News
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Saskatoon

City of Saskatoon postpones return to work plan as COVID numbers increase

A plan to bring workers back to city hall in Saskatoon is being put on the back burner after a spike in COVID-19 cases.

City will revisit plan to bring more office workers back to work in mid-Sept.

Outdoors shot of the front entrance of Saskatoon City Hall
A plan for office workers to return to city hall has been shelved due to high numbers of COVID-19. (Courtney Markewich/CBC)

A plan to bring workers back to city hall in Saskatoon is being put on the back burner after a spike in COVID-19 cases.

Pamela Goulden-McLeod, the city's director of emergency management, saidthe plan to bring workers back to the office starting Sept. 1 is no longer viable.

"We made the decision to return staff to the workplace back around July 11 and 12when the public health orders were lifted," she told CBC Radio's Saskatoon Morning.

"The situation was significantly different than what it is right now."

On Sunday, Saskatoon saw 50 new cases of COVID-19, bringing the known active case total to352. Goulden-McLeod said the new cases are considerably higher than July, when there were only roughly 60 active cases in the city.

"There's a high risk that COVIDtransmission is not controlled," she said.

"So we really have to look at what we do to ensure the continuity of services for the residents of Saskatoon."

Due to the hands-on nature of many jobs at the city, Goulden-McLeod estimates roughly 75 per cent of city workers have worked in-person since the pandemic began from police to road crews to water treatment workers.

Across the country, many major cities are considering bringing in measures to battle COVID-19, including vaccine mandates for employees. Goulden-McLeod said the city isn't currently pursuing that option, but that nothing is off the table.

"If you'd asked me a month ago, I would have said, 'You know what? We're not looking at any of those things,'" she said.

"But now the landscape is changing."

The city offers rapid testing for workers and requires everyone coming in to their workplace to file a 'fit for duty' form every day, to make sure they're not showing any signs of COVID-19.

The city plans on revisiting its plans to bring workers back to the office in mid-September.

With files from Saskatoon Morning, Leisha Grebinski