Ontario Premier Doug Ford has sent a letter to medical, education and pedeatric officials to gauge interest and advice on children going back to school in person this academic year.
The letter says while cases are trending down, putting kids back in class would impact case rates by up to 11%.
Ford says recent projections shows case levels to remain at 2000 - 4000 per day in the middle of the summer, and bringing kids back would increase the numbers.
He is asking for a response to his letter by tomorrow.
Here is the letter in full:
To whom it may concern:
I am writing today seeking your input on the possible safe return to schools before the end of
this academic year. No one wants to see our schools reopen safely more than I do. Our
government understands the benefits of having children learning in class. At the same time, our
top priority is to ensure any decision we make on school reopening is based on sound scientific
advice, consensus and considers potential or future risks faced by students and staff.
In recent weeks, there has been a wide range of advice and commentary around the reopening
of schools in Ontario. There is consensus in some quarters on how, when and whether schools
should reopen, and diverse and conflicting views in others. Keeping children safe is our
foremost consideration, which is why as experts in health, public health and education we are
seeking your perspective.
Thanks to the hard work of Ontarians across the province, public health indicators are moving in
the right direction. Last week, our government, in consultation with our Chief Medical Officer of
Health, released our three step Roadmap to Reopen. While we look forward to gradually
reopening the province, we all must remain vigilant.
We know the mental health, academic and other challenges some students have faced with at home
learning, particularly those from low-income, racialized and high needs neighbourhoods.
Those same neighbourhoods are often in COVID hotspots, and we know that school cases are
amplified by what is happening in the community. The difficult decision to close schools is not
far behind us and just prior to that, in April, schools were the sources of more outbreaks than
workplaces or any other location. That is why we want to take a gradual approach to returning.
Ontario is not an island. Keeping our students and school staff, and their families, safe in a
global pandemic must include global considerations, especially the impact of new, more
dangerous variants that have now entered our communities through Canada’s borders.
Recent modelling presented by the Science Table suggested that should Ontario reopen
schools to in-class learning we could see an increase of six to 11 per cent in the number of new
daily cases.1 We are expecting new modelling this week that puts the range of new cases
associated with school reopening between 2,000 to 4,000 cases by the end of July. This is
concerning. At the same time we know other jurisdictions are seeing a rapid increase in new,
more dangerous variants that are more contagious, make people and children in particular
sicker, are potentially more deadly and are more resistant to vaccines.
A recent study from Public Health England by the U.K. government indicated a single dose of
either the Pfizer or AstraZeneca vaccine was just 33% effective against the COVID-19 variant
first identified in India. The study found “one dose offered 33 per cent protection against
symptomatic infection from B.1.617.2, and 51 per cent against B.1.1.7. This suggests a single
shot offers 35 per cent less protection against B.1.617.2 compared with B.1.1.7, according to
Financial Times analysis.”2 Other jurisdictions - including Singapore - have recently closed in
person learning as a direct result of that variant.3 That variant is also on the rise in Ontario.
What makes all this new information concerning is that according to the most recent data in the
provincial COVAX system, which tracks who gets vaccinated in Ontario and when, only 41 per
cent of teachers and education workers are vaccinated compared to 62 per cent of the general
adult population in Ontario.
Vaccines remain our best defence against COVID-19. To date, Ontario has successfully
administered more than 8,530,000 doses. As of May 23, 2021, Ontarians aged 12 and up are
now eligible to book a vaccine through the provincial booking system. We are getting doses into
arms as quickly as possible, but due to lack of sufficient supply, children may not be vaccinated
before a return to school in June.
As Premier, my priority throughout the COVID-19 pandemic has always been to protect the
health and safety of Ontarians. We need now to ensure there is broad consensus from our
medical, public health, and education experts that returning to school is the right thing to do. I’ve
always said we have the best minds in the world right here in Ontario and that together we
make the best decisions.
Ultimately, this is our government’s decision, but in light of the foregoing, and the diversity of
perspectives on the safety of reopening schools, I am asking for your views on a number of
issues.
To help guide any decisions regarding schools, and ensure any decision on reopening in-class
learning protects students and staff, I am asking for your perspective on the following questions
that have been raised as concerns to our government:
1. Is the reopening of schools for in person learning safe for students?
2. Is the reopening of schools for in person learning safe for teachers and all education
staff?
3. There are a growing number of cases in Ontario of the variant first identified in India
(B.1.617). Does this mutation pose an increased risk to students and education
workers?
4. The modelling from the Ontario Science Table has suggested that reopening schools will
lead to an increase in cases in the province of Ontario, is this acceptable and safe?
5. Other countries are warning mutations including the B.1.617 variant45 are putting
children at much greater risk and are shutting schools down. Is this concern not shared
by medical experts in Ontario?
6. Should teachers be fully vaccinated before resuming in class lessons and if not, is one
dose sufficient?
7. Under Ontario’s reopening plan, indoor gatherings won’t commence until July. Should
indoor school instruction resume before then?
I ask you to provide your responses to the specific question no later than 5:00 p.m. on Friday,
May 28, 2021.
Sincerely,
Doug Ford
Premier of Ontario
CC:
Ontario Medical Association
SickKids Hospital
Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario (CHEO)
London Health Sciences
McMaster Children’s Hospital
Holland Bloorview Kids Rehabilitation Hospital
Empowered Kids Ontario
Children's Mental Health Ontario
4 abc.net.au/news/2021-05-17/singapore-warns-children-susceptible-to-covid-indian-variant/100144908
5 https://www.straitstimes.com/asia/south-asia/india-deals-with-fears-about-a-third-covid-19-waveaffecting-
kids
Premier of Ontario
Premier ministre
de l’Ontario
Legislative Building
Queen’s Park
Toronto, Ontario
M7A 1A1
Édifice de l’Assemblée législative
Queen’s Park
Toronto (Ontario)
M7A 1A1
Ontario Hospital Association
Canadian Paediatric Society
Pediatricians Alliance of Ontario
University Health Network
Science Advisory Table
Dr David Williams, Chief Medical Officer of Health
The District of Algoma Health Unit, Dr. Jennifer Loo
Brant County Health Unit, Dr. Elizabeth Urbantke
Chatham-Kent Health Unit, Dr. David Colby
Durham Regional Health Unit, Dr. Robert Kyle
Eastern Ontario Health Unit, Dr. Paul Roumeliotis
Grey Bruce Health Unit, Dr. Ian Arra
Haldimand-Norfolk Health Unit, Dr. Shanker Nesathurai
Haliburton, Kawartha, Pine Ridge District Health Unit, Dr. Natalie Bocking
Halton Region Health, Department Dr. Hamidah Meghani
City of Hamilton, Public Health Services, Dr. Elizabeth Richardson
Hastings & Prince Edward Counties Health Unit, Dr. Piotr Oglaza
Huron Perth Health Unit, Dr. Miriam Klassen
Kingston, Frontenac and Lennox & Addington Health Unit, Dr. Kieran Moore
Lambton Health Unit, Dr. Sudit Ranade
Leeds, Grenville & Lanark District Health Unit, Dr. Paula Stewart Middlesex-London Health Unit,
Dr. Christopher Mackie
Niagara Region Public Health Department, Dr. Mustafa Hirji
North Bay Parry Sound District Health Unit, Dr. Jim Chirico
Northwestern Health Unit, Dr. Kit Young Hoon
Ottawa Public Health, Dr. Vera Etches
Oxford Elgin St. Thomas Health Unit, Dr. Joyce Lock
Peel Public Health, Dr. Lawrence Loh
Peterborough County-City Health Unit, Dr. Rosana Salvaterra
Porcupine Health Unit, Dr. Lianne Catton
Renfrew County & District Health Unit, Dr. Robert Cushman
Simcoe Muskoka District Health Unit, Dr. Charles Gardner
Sudbury and District Health Unit, Dr. Penny Sutcliffe
Thunder Bay District Health Unit, Dr. Janet DeMille
Timiskaming Health Unit, Dr. Glenn Corneil
City of Toronto Health Unit, Dr. Eileen de Villa
Region of Waterloo, Public Health, Dr. Hsiu-Li Wang
Wellington-Dufferin-Guelph Health Unit, Dr. Nicola Mercer
Windsor-Essex County Health Unit, Dr. Wajid Ahmed
York Region Public Health, Dr. Karim Kurji
Premier of Ontario
Premier ministre
de l’Ontario
Legislative Building
Queen’s Park
Toronto, Ontario
M7A 1A1
Édifice de l’Assemblée législative
Queen’s Park
Toronto (Ontario)
M7A 1A1
Association des enseignantes et des enseignants franco-ontariens
Elementary Teachers' Federation of Ontario
Ontario English Catholic Teachers Association
Ontario Secondary School Teachers Federation
Canadian Union of Public Employees – Ontario
Education Workers’ Alliance of Ontario
Ontario Council of Educational Workers