Toronto

Ford apologizes after public backlash to enhanced police powers, playground closures

Ontario Premier Doug Ford apologized to Ontarians Thursday morning, days after his government faced intense backlash for introducing a number of additional COVID-19 restrictions that were not recommended by health experts and then nixed earlier this week.

Premier Doug Ford currently isolating in Toronto after staffer contracted COVID-19

Ontario Premier Doug Ford hadn't faced questions since his government backtracked late last week on several controversial measures put in place as the province's third wave of COVID-19 worsened. (Chris Young/The Canadian Press)

Ontario Premier Doug Ford apologized to Ontarians Thursday morning, days after his government faced intense backlash for introducing a number of additional COVID-19 restrictions that were not recommended by health experts and then nixed earlier this week.

Ford, who is isolating at his late mother's home in Etobicoke after a staff member tested positive for COVID-19, said at a news conference he wanted to "address the events of this past week" after his government put in new measures in response to "extremely troubling modelling."

The province was trying to curb mobility in Ontario, he said.

"But we moved too fast," Ford said, with some measures going too far.

"Simply put, we got it wrong. We made a mistake. These decisions, they left a lot of people really concerned," Ford said.

"For that I am sorry, and I sincerely apologize."

WATCH | Ford on paid sick days:

Ontario premier promises help with paid sick days

4 years ago
Duration 0:49
Ontario Premier Doug Ford spoke from COVID-19 isolation on Thursday to announce his government will work on its own support program for those who lose wages when they're forced off work because of the coronavirus.

The premier and some of his top cabinet ministers have been under fire after announcing last Friday that the province would close playgrounds and hand police arbitrary powers, among other additional measures, in a bid to curb the third wave of the pandemic. 

The public outcry to both moves was so swift and fierce that the government reversed course on both within days of the announcement. Members of the Ontario COVID-19 Science Advisory Table also disavowed the decisions, making clear in interviews with media that they were not based on their own recommendations to cabinet. 

Various sources close to the government told CBC News the decisions came amid panic over the latest modelling for the pandemic and fears that Ford's approval among voters would suffer badly if he was not seen to be taking action.

Ford appears emotional

At one point during Thursday's news conference, Ford appeared to cry while talking about the pandemic and how hard it has been for businesses, health-care workers and families.

"I understand your frustration," he said. "This experience, this pandemic, it's something that has affected every single person."

Opposition politicians had little sympathy for the premier.

"Ford chose to walk people into a catastrophic third wave," NDP leader Andrea Horwath said on Twitter. "He chose politics over public health. Today, he offered nothing."

"Doug Ford knows he's spiralling and that Ontario voters have lost confidence in his ability to manage this emergency," echoed Liberal Leader Steven Del Duca. 

Driven by variants of concern, the third wave has pushed Ontario's health-care system to a breaking point. As of Thursday, there were 2,350 people with COVID-19 in hospital. Of those, 806 were in intensive care units and 588 required a ventilator to breathe, both all-time highs for the province.

Hospitals throughout the province have been ordered to stop all non-emergency surgeries amid a record number of patient transfers, as health networks try to cope with the influx of COVID-19 patients.

WATCH | Ford appears to cry while talking about people's experiences during pandemic:

Ford breaks down talking about people who have lost loved ones to COVID-19

4 years ago
Duration 1:05
"I hear it every day," Ontario Premier Doug Ford said before pausing to sip a glass of water. "People telling me their stories — the stories that make you cry."

The provincial government has also faced mounting pressure to implement its own paid sick leave program for workers who fall ill with the disease or are exposed to someone with a confirmed case, something that public health experts and advocates have been demanding for months.

House Leader Paul Calandra said on Wednesday that the province would provide "enhancements" to the federal Canada recovery sickness benefit (CRSB) and that details would be announced "very, very soon."

Premier hints at sick pay, offers no details

Ford said Thursday it is "not lost on him" that he is able to isolate and continue working.

"For too many people right now, that's not the case," Ford said.

Throughout the pandemic, Ford and his ministers have shut down calls to create a system for paid sick days in Ontario by saying the province didn't want to double up on the federal program, which until recently, they repeatedly said was sufficient.

Provincial officials have rejected calls from GTHA (Greater Toronto and Hamilton Area) mayors, the province's science table, local medical officers of health, Opposition parties and countless citizens to do more. The City of Toronto called on the province to institute paid sick leave last May, but to no avail.

Messaging started to change in the beginning of 2021, when Ford's government began to point out gaps in the federal system, but so far it has taken no action.

"We're now working on our own solution to fill those gaps for everyone in Ontario," Ford said.

The premier did not elaborate on what that "solution" might look like, despite being repeatedly asked.

In a statement issued after the news conference, Fred Hahn, president of the Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) Ontario, said Ontarians were waiting for some sort of commitment to deliver paid sick days, only to get "absolutely nothing."

"The chorus of voices calling for paid sick days is roaring over Ford's inaction," Hahn said. "It's time to back apologies with actions. It's time for far more than an assurance that he'll work on something."

In 2018, Ford's own government cut two paid personal leave days for workers instituted by the previous Liberal government.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Adam Carter

Reporter

Adam Carter is a Newfoundlander who now calls Toronto home. You can follow him on Twitter @AdamCarterCBC or drop him an email at adam.carter@cbc.ca.

With files from Lucas Powers