Manitoba

Manitoba NDP leader pushes province to provide more detail on new COVID-19 cases

The Manitoba government needs to provide more detail on where new cases of COVID-19 occur and release more information on weekends, Manitoba’s opposition leader said Tuesday.

Release names of affected communities, more info on weekends, NDP Leader Wab Kinew says

NDP Leader Wab Kinew says lack of information about where new cases of COVID-19 are occurring could allow the virus and public anxiety to spread. (CBC)

The Manitoba government needs to provide more detail on where new cases of COVID-19 occur and release more information on weekends, Manitoba's opposition leader said Tuesday.

NDP Leader Wab Kinew's comments came after a number of businesses in Steinbach, Man., shut down temporarily, citing concern over local news and social media reports that two new cases were linked to a local restaurant and credit union.

"That really underlines the importance of the Manitoba government coming forward and being a lot more transparent … about these cases, so that people in Manitoba have confidence and continue to do our parts to combat the pandemic," said Kinew.

More than two dozen confirmed cases of COVID-19 were announced announced over the long weekend — a significant jump which Health Minister Cameron Friesen acknowledged had many people concerned. 

WATCH | Weekend COVID numbers jump:

Weekend COVID numbers

4 years ago
Duration 2:37
Health officials in Manitoba try to quell public fears after long-weekend COVID-19 jump.

"People have a desire for information and we need to provide it," he said at a news conference on Tuesday. 

Friesen emphasized that most of the new cases were linked either to travel or to other known cases, and the two Steinbach cases were related to the same household.

'Vacuum of information': Kinew

In announcing the new cases over the weekend, however, the province did not provide any detail about which health regions the new cases occurred in.

"Both COVID-19 and the anxiety that it causes spread in a vacuum of information," said Kinew, adding that more details could have been provided in a press release or public comments.

Kinew also called on the province to provide more specific information on where cases occur, down to naming the municipality, so that people in those communities have a better understanding of whether they might be affected.

At Tuesday's news conference, Friesen said the province is considering implementing a "red light, green light" system that would impose different restrictions in different parts of the province, depending on how the virus is spreading. 

"We need to have a more nuanced approach," he said. "If we have something happen in a southwest part of Manitoba, it should not necessitate ... that we close the northeast part of Manitoba."

For that to work, people in those communities need to "buy in," said Kinew, adding that trying to impose restrictions where people aren't aware there have been cases could be met with pushback.

"I think that providing this more granular level of detail would actually pave the way," he said.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Cameron MacLean is a journalist for CBC Manitoba living in Winnipeg, where he was born and raised. He has more than a decade of experience reporting in the city and across Manitoba, covering a wide range of topics, including courts, politics, housing, arts, health and breaking news. Email story tips to cameron.maclean@cbc.ca.