ontario state of emergency

Here's what might change when the state of emergency in Ontario is over

The state of emergency Ontario has been under since mid-March is set to end soon. But while some things may revert back to normal, others may not.

Earlier this week the province announced Ontario's state of emergency would be extended until July 24. Previously Doug Ford said he had hoped the state of emergency wouldn't need to be extended again, but this final extension is for a specific reason: to ensure a new piece of legislation is debated and voted on first.

Earlier this week the government introduced the Reopening Ontario Act (ROA), which will allow some of the emergency orders issued under the state of emergency to continue after it's lifted and into 2021.

The new legislation is designed to give the province "the necessary flexibility to address the ongoing risks and effects of the COVID-19 outbreak."

ROA will allow the government to continue enforcing some of the emergency orders imposed under Ontario's Emergency Management and Civil Protection Act (EMCPA) including closures, public health measures, lockdowns and restrictions on gatherings for up to one year.

Right now, some of the emergency orders currently in place until at least July 22 relate to prohibiting price gouging, regulating hydro prices, enforcement powers, rules for pandemic pay, patios, long-term and retirement home employee regulations and more.

We know that at least one, curbside pickup and delivery of cannabis, is set to expire and revert back to in-store service only. At this point it's unclear which other measures will stay or go.

If ROA is passed, certain emergency orders can continue for an initial 30 days, after which the Lieutenant Governor in Council can choose to extend them for up to 30 more days at a time as needed or rescind them.

Under EMCPA and included in the ROA is the provision that no new orders will be created, and that orders in place can be removed but not added back. The orders in place can continue.

"Appropriate oversight and transparency would be ensured through regular, mandated reporting that provides the rationale for the extension of any emergency order," reads a statement from the province.

"The legislation would include the same types of provisions on offences and penalties as set out under the EMCPA to address non-compliance with orders."

Lead photo by

Fareen Karim


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