British Columbia

B.C. officials announce return to in-class learning, order businesses to reactivate COVID safety plans

B.C. Provincial Health Officer Bonnie Henry says "it is essential" for schools to be open and that in-person learning will begin Monday. Rapid tests will not be available to schools Monday, and there will no longer be contact tracing of individual cases.

Provincial Health Officer Dr. Bonnie Henry says rapid tests will not be available to schools Monday

standing at podium
Provincial Health Officer Dr. Bonnie Henry at a COVID-19 briefing on Jan. 4. Provincial officials announced Friday that students across B.C. will return to in-class learning Monday, despite the risk that the Omicron variant may affect staffing levels. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

The B.C. government says thousands of students across the province will return to in-class learning Monday despite the risk that the highly transmissible Omicron variant could significantly impact staffing in the weeks to come.

Education Minister Jennifer Whiteside joined Health Minister Adrian Dix and Provincial Health Officer Bonnie Henry to make the announcement during a live news conference Friday.

Whiteside said there will be enhanced safety measures in place at schools, including staggered break times, virtual assemblies and visitor restrictions. She also said schools will have access to three-layered masks despite calls from the B.C. Teachers' Federation to distribute N95s instead.

"It is essential — and it is a priority for all of us — that we keep schools open," said Henry.

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Last week, the province announced a staggered return to school in January due to the spread of Omicron, and school administrators have been using this time to prepare contingency plans, including functional, phased closures for when too many staff are sick or required to isolate.

B.C. Teachers' Federation responds 

Terri Mooring, president of the B.C. Teachers' Federation, held her own news conference immediately after the province's ended. 

Mooring said school staff want to avoid functional closures and that is why the union is frustrated that more layers of protection are not being offered by the government. 

She said she would like to see the province not only make N95 masks available to students and staff upon request, but also prioritize boosters for teachers and work to get more students vaccinated.

According to Mooring, the highest vaccination rates for children ages five to 11 who have received their first dose is 52 per cent in Vancouver Coastal Health. In the Northern Health region, it's currently only 23 per cent.

"We would like to see much more of an emphasis placed on access to those vaccinations for school-age children."

Students from Vancouver Talmud Torah School show off their Band-Aids after receiving COVID-19 vaccines on Monday, Nov. 29, 2021. The union representing B.C. teachers says it is concerned about low vaccination rates among students, primarily in the Northern Health region, as thousands of children are set to return to school Monday. (Maggie MacPherson/CBC)

Rapid tests not coming rapidly

The province has also been criticized for the lack of available rapid tests in B.C.

Health officials have faced calls over the course of the pandemic, and more acutely in the past week as Omicron quickly spreads, to widely distribute the tests, which can be used at home and provide results in minutes.

With children expected to return to school next week, improved availability of such tests would be welcomed by educators and families alike.

Henry said Friday that a supply is on the way from the federal government and should arrive next week. 

She said all rapid tests in the province now are currently spoken for and are being used in long-term care for health-care workers and remote Indigenous communities.

B.C. health officials say the federal government is sending rapid tests to the province that will be available to test symptomatic teachers in schools beginning next week. (David Horemans/CBC)

When the new batch arrives from Ottawa, Henry said the tests will be available to test symptomatic school staff late next week and, eventually, will be available to support families to test children at home.

Whiteside said schools will no longer report individual COVID-19 cases to public health for contact tracing. Schools will alert health authorities if overall attendance dips significantly, which will trigger a public health investigation, she said.

Henry said there is no absolute threshold for absenteeism, as what's normal will vary by school and district. She said parents will still be notified when a COVID-19 outbreak is identified.

Reactivating health order

Outside the education system, Henry also announced she is ordering B.C. business owners to reactivate COVID-19 safety plans.

All B.C. employers open during the pandemic once again must have approved health and safety protocols in place to reduce the spread of COVID-19.

The requirement was first put in place when B.C. began reopening in May 2020, after the first shutdown.

Under such an order, employers have an obligation to minimize risk to staff and customers. This includes measures like physical barriers, capacity limits indoors and keeping workers home when they are sick.

A Vancouver grocery store worker wears a protective face mask and gloves as a customer stands on the other side of a plastic divider in April 2020. B.C. business owners were ordered to reactivate COVID-19 safety plans on Friday. (Jonathan Hayward/The Canadian Press)

In July 2021, the province announced workplaces could ease certain restrictions and shift from strict safety plans to communicable disease plans, which include protocols like handwashing.

This is now no longer the case due to the Omicron variant, and Henry said WorksafeBC is available to offer support to employers if they need help with these plans.

On Friday, the province announced 349 people are now in hospital with COVID-19, including 93 in intensive care, while nine more people have died from the disease.

As of Friday, 23.9 per cent of COVID-19 tests in B.C. are coming back positive, according to the province's COVID-19 dashboard

Henry has said anything above a five per cent test-positivity rate indicates a concerning level of community transmission.

A total of 3,144 new cases were also reported. But in the wake of the rapid spread of the highly transmissible Omicron variant, which has caused testing capacity issues in B.C. — and in light of the decreased virulence of the variant for many who contract it — experts say daily case counts are now a less reliable statistic for understanding the pandemic.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Bridgette Watson writes and produces for news and current affairs at CBC British Columbia. You can reach her at Bridgette.Watson@cbc.ca.

With files from Justin McElroy and Joel Ballard