This past weekend marked the first days of Ontario's new provincewide shutdown, and establishments that were forced to close their doors after mere weeks of reopening or who haven't gotten to open at all in months are likely (and understandably) seething over how busy the businesses that remain open have been.
Photos and videos taken at various major retailers in the past few days are leading many to wonder why a small struggling restaurant can't open its socially distanced outdoor patio, but North York IKEA and Yorkdale Mall can have people crowding in lineups outside and packed shoulder to shoulder indoors.
This is a video of IKEA North york this morning but my wife can't open her salon on appointment after investing thousands on PPE.#FordfailedOntario pic.twitter.com/aBlYKwr69M
— Victor (@Kollerkunzultz) April 3, 2021
All "non-essential" retailers, including those in shopping centres, are currently permitted to remain open across the province with 25 per cent capacity limits in place — a change from the last provincial shutdown, during which such stores could not operate beyond curbside pickup and delivery.
This time around, there is also no formal stay-at-home order in effect, and residents have been encouraged to get outside and enjoy the weather and the businesses that are still open, so long as they do so safely.
This was the line to get into the CF Toronto Eaton Centre this weekend - 📹 Devon Dine https://t.co/krZQbv0a4e #Toronto #EatonCentre pic.twitter.com/YOqirS5m3H
— blogTO (@blogTO) April 4, 2021
But the footage from the long weekend doesn't exactly scream "safe," with people still very much crammed together despite the reduced caps and eager to wait in line and shop in close proximity to strangers, though they can no longer dine on a patio six feet away from another table.
This is what Yorkdale Mall looked like on Saturday afternoon - 📹 Haley Bogaert https://t.co/hg39xvsbLj #Toronto #YorkdaleMall pic.twitter.com/Egg8pJf1kZ
— blogTO (@blogTO) April 4, 2021
Mall parking lots were shown to be as rammed as ever, with staff from at least one centre telling blogTO that screening procedures at entrances were not being conducted properly, with customers simply "shown a piece of paper with symptoms and waved in" to packed halls.
Some health officials fear that our repeated "leaky lockdowns" will not yield the desired results as far as reducing case numbers and ICU admissions, and only serve to further damage businesses in certain industries that have proven their settings contribute very little to virus spread.
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