TTC extends deadline for staff to disclose COVID-19 vaccination status - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 11:04 AM | Calgary | -13.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Toronto

TTC extends deadline for staff to disclose COVID-19 vaccination status

TTC employees have been given an extra 10 days to disclose theirCOVID-19 vaccination status after their deadline was extended.

Employees now have until Sept. 30 to report their status

TTC staff have been given until Sept. 30 to disclose their vaccination status. (John Sandeman/CBC)

TTC employees have been given an extra 10days to disclose theirCOVID-19 vaccination statusafter their deadline was extended.

Mayor John Toryannounced in August that City of Toronto employees must be fully vaccinated againstCOVID-19 by Oct.30 and would need to disclosetheir vaccination status by Sept. 13.

Despite transit workersand Toronto police being exempt from the regulations,TTCchief executive Richard Leary released a statement immediately after Tory's announcement sayingall staff and contractors would be required to disclose their vaccine status.

That deadline was initially set atSept. 20 and has now been revisedto Sept. 30.

Speaking at a newsconference on Tuesday, Tory said it was "understandable that there's a little bit of extra time needed" for the TTC to hear from all of their employees.

He said, speaking from the city's experience of gathering vaccination disclosures, that those working in "dispersed settings" across the city with littleInternet or email access had proved harder to reach.

"And if you think about the work being done bytransit operators and others in the transit system,they work in that similar kind of way," Tory said.

Mayor John Tory says it was 'understandable' that the TTC had offered their staff more time to disclose their vaccination status. (CBC)

The city last weekextended its owndeadline for its employees to disclose their COVID-19 vaccination status from Sept. 13 to Friday, Sept. 17.

While there was "still a littlebit of work to do in that regard," Tory said, the "vast majority" of the city's 37,000 employees had disclosed their vaccination status, many of whom were double vaccinated.

Tory said the vaccine disclosure demand was "a very fair request and it's made in extraordinary circumstances," and he said he was "optimistic" more TTC employeeswould report theirs in the coming weeks.

The TorontoPolice Service had alsoinstructed all of its members uniform and civilian toprovide proof of their COVID-19 vaccination status by Sept. 13.

Passport enforcement to be 'complaint-based'

When asked about vaccine passports, which are due to come into force in Ontario on Wednesday, Tory said he expected the system to"happen smoothly with very few incidents."

"This is the best defence we have against any further lockdowns. This is the best defence we have to keep people in school, keep people working. It's the best defence we have against this terrible health menace."

He said he hopes people will be asked and will show proof of vaccines "without any interference."

Tory deferred to Matthew Pegg, Toronto's fire chief and head of emergency management,to answer questions about enforcement of the new regulations. Pegg said itwould be "largely complaint-based" and would be dealt with by the city's contingent ofmunicipal law enforcement officers,Toronto Public Health and Toronto police.

He said "every single case will continue to be evaluated on its merits."

"These are another set of challenging regulations for us to enforce," Pegg said.

"Really, our success on this moving forward is going to be based and dependent upon our collective cooperation. I have every reason to believe that our city will do just that," he said.

Tory agreed, saying enforcement would depend largely on the "honour system."

"We don't have anywhere near enough enforcement people to be at every store, every restaurant, every venue. Nor wouldthatbe anything that I think people would really welcome."

Tory was speaking at the announcement ofa new vaccination clinic located at Woodbine Mall. The new clinic islocated at 500 Rexdale Blvd. in Etobicoke and replaces the clinic operations at The Hangar, which closed on Saturday.

The Woodbine Mall clinic will beopen from Tuesday to Saturday, 1 p.m. to 7 p.m., for walk-in appointments for first or second doses of the COVID-19 vaccine for anyone born in 2009 or earlier at the time of vaccination. The clinic will also offer meningitis, hepatitis B and human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccinations for students in Grades 7 to 12.