Business

Ontario’s fourth wave is here, and businesses across the Innovation Corridor are championing one final defense

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Photo credit: Pexels/Tim Mossholder

 

What we all feared has come to pass – COVID-19 case numbers are increasing and Ontario’s COVID-19 Science Advisory Table confirmed that we are indeed bracing for a fourth wave of the pandemic.

In many ways we’re ready for it. Ontario is better equipped to deal with the pandemic than we were at its onset. We have a deeper understanding of the virus, our hospitals are more prepared, our vaccination rates are high and, importantly, we are now aware of global best practices and mitigation strategies being adopted around the world.

In another way, we are not ready. As among the best of these mitigation strategies have yet to see widespread adoption: proof of vaccination or a recent negative COVID test to access non-essential businesses.

If this fourth wave produces another lockdown, small businesses will not survive. 

This isn’t a matter of a few local shops and eateries shuttering their doors for good. We’re facing the facts that thousands of businesses will each be carrying hundreds of thousands of dollars of new debt, risking job security and the potential of closure. This will be a huge blow to the economy of southern Ontario’s Innovation Corridor– which is the province’s largest economic zone, generating more than $360 billion in annual GDP.

The best chance we have at avoiding another lockdown is with what we’re calling COVID Safe Passes. Similar digital tools are being used around the world to verify COVID safety either through a recent negative test or through proof of vaccination.

Businesses across the Corridor, and indeed around Ontario, believe in the right of individuals to choose whether or not to get vaccinated. But we also believe that we need a better way of managing this virus, one that allows for our economy to remain open and for life to resume. This is now particularly important since it appears that unvaccinated members of our communities – including children under the age of 12 – are at higher risk of transmission.

A provincial framework is the best way forward. Individual cities and businesses may be designing their own vaccination policies and practices, but our regional economy is highly interconnected. Someone who lives in Mississauga might work in Hamilton or Niagara, and then enjoy a baseball game in Toronto. We need one system, one pass, for the entire province. Anything less would be ineffective, confusing, or redundant. 

COVID Safe Passes are also becoming more popular because they protect individuals’ privacy while allowing economies to stay open, and we’re encouraged that the federal government is introducing a version of this for international travel. Now is the time for Ontario to expeditiously work with the Government of Canada to institute some form of a digital COVID Safe Pass system that will keep our economy open. 

One thing we can all agree on – lockdowns must be avoided moving forward and at all costs. Lockdowns are an admission that we have failed to keep our economy and people safe, and they have unimaginably high social and economic costs. Luckily, with tools like the COVID Safe Pass, they are no longer our only option. We can open, re-open, and stay open – safely.

On behalf of the business community of the Innovation Corridor, we urge the provincial government to adopt and implement a digital proof of vaccination program like the COVID Safe Pass as soon as possible and provide guidelines to businesses on how to use it. 

Ontarians want this, businesses want this, and our economy needs this. We must avoid another general lockdown at all costs.

Ian McLean is President and CEO of the Greater Kitchener-Waterloo Chamber of Commerce. Jan De Silva is President and CEO of the Toronto Region Board of Trade. Together, McLean and De Silva co-chair Canada’s Innovation Corridor Business Council.

 

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