Edmonton

Alberta NDP calls for mandatory COVID vaccine rules for non-essential business

Alberta's Opposition New Democrats are urging Premier Jason Kenney to bring in new rules to make COVID-19 vaccines mandatory for anyone attending non-essential businesses and mass gatherings.

Premier Jason Kenney has said Alberta will not mandate proof of vaccination

A woman making a speech stands at a podium with an orange placard in the front.
The province should also bring back mandatory masking for essential places, NDP Leader Rachel Notley said. (Alberta NDP )

Alberta's Opposition New Democrats are urging Premier Jason Kenney to bring in new rules to make COVID-19 vaccines mandatory for anyone attending non-essential businesses and mass gatherings.

NDP Leader Rachel Notley says the province should also return to mandatory masking for anyone unvaccinated entering essential places, including grocery stores.

Notley says it's critical Kenney act now to arrest rapidly rising infection rates and to protect hospitals from being overwhelmed.

Ontario, Manitoba, British Columbia and Quebec are phasing in or already have requirements for people to show a vaccine card, online image or smartphone verification for many activities deemed non-essential, including visiting bars, restaurants, casinos and sports events.

"This is coming and if we don't act now, I fear we will reach a place where Albertans will be scrambling to catch up with the rest of the world, and our health care and our economy will have been needlessly injured in the process," Notley said Thursday in Calgary.

"No one wants to go back to restrictions. That's why we're proposing a better way."

Notley suggested Alberta could develop a QR digital code that would be available on smartphones or for downloading online to prove vaccination status.

Kenney's United Conservative government, citing health privacy as one reason, has repeatedly said it will not mandate proof of vaccination.

Many municipalities, schools, universities, sports teams and businesses developed their own rules on masking, testing and vaccinations.

On Friday, Edmonton officially reinstates a requirement to wear face coverings in indoor public areas, including stores and restaurants.

Kenney's government lifted almost all health restrictions July 1. It said it was time to stop treating COVID-19 as a crisis and instead manage it long term, which would free up health workers and resources for other health issues.

Case counts rising

In recent weeks, case counts have been rising sharply, averaging more than 1,000 new infections a day for the past week. The caseload is putting renewed pressure on health care. Surgeries have been delayed, patients have been transferred and some emergency room beds have been temporarily closed.

Kenney made his first public appearance since Aug. 9 on Wednesday via Facebook Live. He acknowledged that he was on vacation but that he was in daily contact with his officials about the increasing case numbers.

He took self-selected questions from Albertans for about 70 minutes. In the online chat, he said his government would be using more incentives to get people vaccinated, but didn't give details.

He also said his government is considering renewed public health measures.

Premier Jason Kenney made his first public appearance in 23 days on Wednesday, answering questions from viewers during a livestream on his personal Facebook page after weeks of vacation. (Jason Kenney/Facebook)

Notley said Kenney was negligent in not publicly designating one of his ministers to take the wheel while he was away. 

"I think this is nothing short of government malfeasance," she said Thursday. "It is unprecedented, the degree to which we have seen a government gone missing in the face of a serious crisis.

"I am almost beyond words to describe how shocked I am at how negligent they've been, in terms of the role that they've been elected to fulfil."

Vaccination benchmarks

When Kenney announced in mid-June that all health restrictions would be lifted, he said the plan was predicated on more people getting vaccinated.

Kenney said he hoped 75 per cent of eligible Albertans — those 12 and older — would be fully immunized by fall. 

On Thursday, the province announced 70 per cent of those eligible were fully vaccinated.

Kenney renewed his call for Albertans to get vaccinated and noted that the majority in hospital with COVID-19 were not. He cautioned his Facebook watchers to be aware of false information.

"Please don't believe every crazy Facebook page you might stumble upon."

With files from CBC News