Listen Live

Green Party calls for strong medicine to combat rising COVID-19 numbers

The province urgently needs to shift its COVID-19 response into high gear and deal with the recent increase in cases and the variants of concern.

The BC Green Party says since the beginning of April, more than 6,000 people have tested positive for COVID-19 and the public is looking to the government for transparency and decisive action.

The party is calling for a clear and targeted shutdown strategy for a three-week period that includes enforcement of non-essential travel measures, moving school online for most students, and immediate government support to temporarily close non-essential businesses.

Party leader Sonia Furstenau, the MLA for Cowichan Valley, says instead of bracing for the impact of rising variants, steps need to be taken to stop it right now.

Rather than leaving it up to individuals, she says what’s needed “is a coordinated response and action from government that shows they are taking the immediate and long-term threat of COVID-19 seriously.”

She wants to see “a sense of leadership” in response to rising case numbers and calls from doctors, epidemiologists, and experts to “get in front of the COVID-19 variants.”

Furstenau warns variants of concern will soon be the majority of the cases and the government needs to explain why “it’s not adapting to the changing reality of this virus by tailoring their vaccination rollout to target young people.”

She says there’s a race between variants and the vaccines “and the variants are moving very quickly.”

The BC Green Party says there should be expanded asymptomatic testing and rapid testing in workplaces, schools, businesses, and neighbourhoods.

The party also calls for increased staffing at vaccination clinics and extended hours to administer all doses of vaccine as soon as they arrive in the province.

According to Furstenau, the third wave is the outcome of inaction: “We were not dealt a bad hand – we loosened restrictions despite rising variant cases, allowed out-of-province travel, stalled in-school mask mandates, and did not enforce orders or tailor messaging to hit those who have not been following orders.”

She says the current methods and the messaging are not working and wants a COVID zero strategy rather than one of tolerating high rolling averages.

Mike Patterson
Mike Patterson
Mike is an experience broadcast news journalist with more than four decades of experience. As a reporter he has covered a wide range of stories, from city councils to Royal visits. Mike has also been a news presenter on radio in the Okanagan, Vancouver, and several communities on Vancouver Island. He enjoys skiing at Mt. Washington and Blackcomb, and photography.

Continue Reading

- Advertisement -

Related Articles

- Advertisement -

Latest News

Canada Post to resume limited service as CUPW shifts to rotating strikes Oct. 11

Canada Post says it will begin restarting mail operations this weekend as the Canadian Union of Postal Workers shifts from a national walkout to rotating strikes.

Port Hardy residents encouraged to sign up for e-billing

Port Hardy residents are being encouraged to sign up for the district’s e-billing service while the Canada Post strike continues.

B.C. and Alberta saw largest rent declines as prices fall across Canada, says report

British Columbia and Alberta saw the largest declines in the price of apartment rentals over the past year, although B.C. remained the most expensive province for renters.

B.C. tables bill to hold vape companies accountable for health-care costs

Proposed legislation would allow British Columbia to take legal action against vape manufacturers to recover health-care-related costs. 

Construction industry applauds B.C.’s proposed prompt payment legislation

Construction industry groups in British Columbia are welcoming proposed legislation aimed at ensuring contractors are paid on time.
- Advertisement -