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Kingston, Ont., declares mask use mandatory at many indoor locations after COVID-19 outbreak

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The city of Kingston, Ont., has decided to make mask use mandatory for workers and customers at many indoor public locations following an outbreak of COVID-19 at a local nail salon.

As of Friday afternoon, there were 16 confirmed COVID-19 cases involving people who work at Binh’s Nails and Spa, visited it or are connected to someone who did — almost a quarter of the area’s total known cases.

Kingston, Frontenac and Lennox & Addington Public Health declared an outbreak at the west-end salon Thursday and closed it until further notice.

On Friday, Medical Officer of Health Dr. Kieran Moore told reporters he’d signed an order requiring mask usage at a wide variety of establishments and public settings, including but not limited to:

  • Malls and plazas.
  • Grocery stores.
  • Farmers markets.
  • Libraries.
  • Church or other “faith settings.”
  • “Personal service settings” like nail or hair salons.
  • Public transportation.

“We are not blaming any particular business, but we must learn from this,” Moore said Friday afternoon.

Establishments that fail to make mask use mandatory could be fined more than $5,000, Moore said. The order will come into place when the clock rolls over to Saturday.

“We believe this is prudent, proportionate to the risk, and it’s very reasonable to embrace this now as a lesson learned.”

WATCH | Medical Officer of Health Dr. Kieran Moore on the outbreak:

The 16 new cases — initially reported Friday as 18 but revised downward Friday afternoon — would mean the area has had 79 confirmed cases, just two of them in May and none in June until this week.

The public health agency said Thursday anyone who visited the salon after June 12, when it was allowed to reopen under Ontario’s Stage 2 of lifting restrictions, must get tested and self-isolate until 14 days after their visit.

Moore said he was “saddened” to learn the salon wasn’t following two-metre physical distancing rules nor cleaning properly between sessions. While workers at the salon were wearing masks, that wasn’t always the case with customers, Moore said.

The first confirmed new COVID-19 case involved a health-care worker who visited the salon, developed a fever and chills at work, went home and got tested, he said. 

Other positive cases involve corrections workers, Moore said, although there was no indication the coronavirus had infected anyone in either a health-care or correctional setting.

None of the new cases had any travel history “outside of our community,” he added. 

A one-day, drive-thru testing site in the parking lot of St. Lawrence College in Kingston will likely be set up Sunday for anyone who may have a connection to the salon outbreak, Moore said.

People line up around the block at a COVID-19 testing centre in Kingston, Ont., on Friday, following an outbreak of the virus at a local nail salon. (Natalia Goodwin/CBC)

Mask policies increasingly common

The Kingston health unit is one of a small-but-growing number of Canadian jurisdictions to declare mask usage mandatory in most indoor public spaces.

In Ontario, the Windsor-Essex County Health Unit and Wellington-Dufferin-Guelph Public Health have already implemented such rules around face coverings, while the Montreal suburb of Côte Saint-Luc will make them mandatory starting July 1.

Some Ontario transit agencies have declared mask usage mandatory on buses, streetcars and trains, including Toronto, Hamilton and Guelph.

In Ottawa, the first Canadian city to introduce such a policy, passengers have been required to cover their faces since June 15, although for now no fines are being issued. 

Dr. David Williams, Ontario’s chief medical officer of health, said earlier this week those kinds of decisions would be left in the hands of municipalities, rather than implemented provincewide.

This June 26, 2020, graph from the Kingston, Frontenac and Lennox & Addington Public Health shows a recent spike in COVID-19 cases due to an outbreak at a local nail salon. The region had gone nearly a month without any new cases. (Kingston, Frontenac and Lennox & Addington Public Health)

‘A wake-up call’

Ontario Premier Doug Ford said on Friday the Kingston outbreak is concerning, but shows the contact tracing system is working because health officials were able to quickly reach hundreds of contacts.

Health Minister Christine Elliott said the province isn’t considering tightening restrictions because of what happened.

Given Kingston had gone nearly one month without any new COVID-19 cases, the outbreak may be a sign residents have “a little bit of fatigue” when it comes to obeying physical distancing rules, Mayor Bryan Paterson said.

Paterson said about 500 people had visited the salon since it reopened, and roughly 700 people are now in self-isolation. While he expected the number of positive cases would keep rising over the coming days, he was also confident the city would get the outbreak under control.

“The good news is that we caught it when we did. And so we think that we’ll at least be able to prevent it from spreading too far,” Paterson told CBC.

“But man, it’s really a wake-up call.”

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