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Sask. reopening plan reaches vaccination threshold for Step 1

According to Premier Scott Moe, 13,651 people were vaccinated against COVID-19 on Sunday, setting a new provincial one-day record. (Ryan Remiorz/The Canadian Press - image credit)
According to Premier Scott Moe, 13,651 people were vaccinated against COVID-19 on Sunday, setting a new provincial one-day record. (Ryan Remiorz/The Canadian Press - image credit)

Premier Scott Moe has announced that Saskatchewan has now reached the COVID-19 vaccination threshold, and Phase One of the province's reopening plan is expected to begin later this month.

On Sunday, Premier Moe announced 71 per cent of people over the age of 40 have now been vaccinated, meeting the criteria the provincial government has set out to begin reopening the province.

The reopening date is now tentatively set for May 30, three weeks after the vaccination target is reached.

Phase One of the plan will mean household bubbles can expand to ten people and public indoor gatherings will be allowed to be up to 30 people.

As well, restaurants and bars will be able to reopen, with a maximum of six people at a table, with two metres between tables.

Places of worship will be allowed to open at 30 per cent of capacity, or 150 people, whichever is less, with physical distancing between households.

On Sunday, Moe said the province had the highest number of vaccinations in one day, at 13,651 people receiving the COVID-19 vaccine.

The province noted 59 per cent of adults 30 and older have been vaccinated so far. For Phase Two of the province's reopening plan, 70 per cent of people over 30 will have to be vaccinated.

Business plan

Business leaders in downtown Saskatoon are ready to welcome back patrons as the province sets a timeline for its reopening plan, but they know they'll have to take it slow and experts say a calm, and cautious approach is needed.

"Unless we want to have a resurgence and a fourth wave we're going to have to do so very, very cautiously and very carefully, so I think all businesses need to get that message," said Dr. Cory Neudorf, a professor at the University of Saskatchewan's Department of Community Health and Epidemiology and public-health physician.

Neudorf says business leaders need to take care to maintain best practices, similar to what they adapted last spring after Saskatchewan's initial COVID-19 restrictions were lifted, but said with the presence of variants, even more care must be taken. He also noted a more complete reopening won't be able to happen safely until more people get their second dose of the vaccine.

"I think we have a bit of work ahead of us yet," said Neudorf.

The relaxed restrictions will allow an increase in the number of people who are allowed to sit at a table in a restaurant, climbing from four to six, will see households be able to mingle again and also see gathering numbers climb as well.

Brent Penner is the executive director of the DTNYXE Business Improvement District in Saskatoon. He says businesses have been following best practices closely for months and he's confident that work will continue, even as businesses get busier.

"We're certainly looking forward to the ability to have more people in restaurants, hopefully more people willing to travel, those sorts of things, but I think the mere fact we've been doing this now for well over a year, people know what to expect."

Penner says in his own experiences shopping downtown, he constantly sees people keeping their distance from one another and businesses taking steps to protect themselves like counting customers and offering hand-sanitizing stations.

He also stressed its important for people to continue being respectful and patient as businesses see a pick up in patrons.

"It's basic," he said. "Treat those employees as you'd like to be treated in that situation."

Premier Scott Moe said in a news release on Sunday while the Government of Saskatchewan has reached its first threshold for re-opening, its ambitions around vaccinations are "not slowing down."

"In fact, they are speeding up," said Moe in the release.

As of Sunday, more than 50 per cent of all Saskatchewan adults have now received their first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine.