What in heaven's name are you talking about?
Canada needs to adopt a 'more sustainable' approach to COVID-19, Tam says: 'We do need to get back to some normalcy,' chief public health officer says' cbc.ca/news/politics/….
"Canada's top doctor said today the country needs to find a more 'sustainable' way to deal with the COVID-19 pandemic and future variants of the virus."
"Dr. Theresa Tam said all existing public health policies, including provincial vaccine passports, need to be "re-examined" in the coming weeks — because it's clear now that Canada and the rest of the world will be grappling with this virus for months or years to come."
"What we need to do going forward, as we emerge out of this Omicron wave, is recognize this virus is not going to disappear. We need to be able to address the ongoing presence of the SARS-CoV-2 virus in a more sustainable way," Tam said.
"Further waves will occur. Some will be quite severe and disruptive and we need to be ready for them. But we do need to have longer-term, sustained approaches and capacity-building so we're not in a crisis mode all the time as we fight this virus."
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Sloly's resignation comes as sources tell CBC News he's been accused of bullying and volatile behaviour that has damaged relations with senior leadership and compromised the force's ability to cope with the truck protest.
Multiple sources have told CBC News that Sloly allegedly belittled and berated senior Ottawa Police Service officers in front of their colleagues, and has failed to put forward a solid operations plan to end the crisis.
Canadian Civil Liberties Association on Prime Minister Justin Trudeau invoking The Emergencies Act:
'The federal government has not met the threshold necessary to invoke the Emergencies Act.' #cdnpoli
'This law creates a high and clear standard for good reason: the Act allows government to bypass ordinary democratic processes.
The Emergencies Act can only be invoked when a situation "seriously threatens the ability of the Government of Canada to preserve the sovereignty, security and territorial integrity of Canada" and when the situation "cannot be effectively dealt with under any other law of Canada"
A bit of background for the good folks in Ottawa on Police Chief Peter Sloly:
He left the Toronto police force after the police commission chose Mark Saunders (now retired) as chief instead of him.
Before he left, he said blowing up Toronto's current policing model is the only way to slay the force’s $1-billion-plus budget.
He said: “Until policing stops being focused and driven on that reactive enforcement model, it will continue to be exponentially costly."
Unless radical changes were made, Sloly said, he feared for the future.
“I’ve never seen policing at this low a point in terms of public trust and legitimacy. I feel there’s a crisis in the offing, not just here but right across North America.”
This is escalating quickly:
Ottawa police vow crackdown on 'dangerous' trucker protest praised by Trump reuters.com/world/americas…
Ottawa police vowed on Friday to crack down on an "increasingly dangerous" protest by hundreds of truckers who have shut down the center of the Canadian capital for eight days to demand an end to COVID-19 vaccine mandates.
The well-organized blockade, which police say has relied partly on funding from sympathizers in the United States, is unprecedented by Canadian standards. Hundreds more truckers planned to enter the city this weekend, Ottawa police chief Peter Sloly said.
Statistics Canada job report, January 2022:
Employment fell by 200,000 (-1.0%) jobs in January and the unemployment rate rose 0.5 percentage points to 6.5%.'
'With the spread of the Omicron variant of COVID-19, many jurisdictions had implemented stricter public health measures by the Labour Force Survey (LFS) reference week of January 9 to 15.'
'Declines were driven by Ontario & Quebec, &
accommodation & food services was hardest-hit industry. Youth & core-aged women, who are more likely than other demographic groups to work in industries affected by public health measures in place in January, saw the largest impacts.'
Email from a Caledonia resident:
'I was born & raised there, we raised our kids there, but we decided to move after the (land claims) protest. I'm curious as to the difference between what continues to this day to be the situation in Caledonia vs what is happening in Ottawa' 1/3
'I'm not commenting on the substance of either protest nor support for or against either. I would just like to understand what makes one legal over the other, given that the Prime Minister seems to be saying the trucker protest is 'no longer' legal. Do you happen to know?' 2/3
Answer: I have no idea why the land claims dispute in Caledonia has lasted 15+ years, shattering the lives of many, whereas in Ottawa the PM talks about the trucker protest 'becoming illegal' after a week, save that Caledonia is out of sight & out of mind compared to Ottawa. 3/3