Saskatchewan

City of Regina undecided on whether to maintain COVID-19 restrictions once province rolls back mandates

Regina's city council hasn't made any decisions yet regarding COVID-19 measures for its facilities, or for services like public transportation.

Discussions to come around changes to measures in coming weeks: Mayor

The City of Regina has yet to decide whether it will implement its own COVID-19 restrictions once the province drops health orders. (Kirk Fraser/CBC)

The City of Regina is looking at its options for COVID-19 restrictions in a world where the province may not have any.

Wednesday night's city council meeting included a discussion around what life could be like in the city as the province looks to wind down mandates put in place to reduce the spread of the virus.

City manager Chris Holden said the city would retain control of measures in place in its facilities and for services like transportation.

Discussions on what the city will do are set to take place in the coming weeks, Regina's Mayor Sandra Masters said.

"If restrictions are lifted everywhere else, what's the effectiveness of them just holding on in our facilities, or our buildings, or our buses for example?" Masters said on CBC's the Morning Edition on Thursday.

In the past, the city has used different restrictions than other parts of the province. Masters said that could continue.

Holden told council the city would act under the advice of the chief medical health officer and medical professionals like the deputy medical health officer for Regina.

Holden said metrics the city uses to gauge the COVID-19 situation seem to give reason for cautious optimism.

Hospitalizations within the city were down, he said, and even though testing data available at the time wasn't completely accurate due to the province only counting COVID-19 positive PCR tests, he said case numbers appeared to decrease over the eight days before Wednesday's meeting.

The city manager noted that given discussions taking place within the city, the province, the country and even the world, it would be "tough to maintain" proof of vaccination or negative test requirements without a provincial health order to back-up any requirements.

Holden said 80 per cent of the eligible population in Regina had at least two doses of vaccine, while 86 per cent had at least one dose of the vaccine, though only 43 per cent of residents had a booster dose.

Masters lauded Regina residents for their efforts in getting vaccinated on Thursday.

"If people continue to get their boosters then we can move forward in a much safer fashion," she said.

With files from The Morning Edition