Leamington, Kingsville join rest of Ontario in Stage 2

By The Canadian Press

The towns of Kingsville and Leamington have joined the rest of Ontario in Stage 2 of the government’s reopening plan.

Premier Doug Ford announced Monday that the communities, which were the final two towns in Stage 1 of the process, would move up as of 12:01 a.m. Tuesday.

He said COVID-19 outbreaks on local farms are under control and community spread of the virus is low.

The premier said he will visit the Windsor-Essex region in the coming days to thank the community for its patience.

Last week, the government dispatched Emergency Management Ontario to help co-ordinate health care and housing for more than 190 agri-food workers who have tested positive for the virus.

Most of Windsor-Essex, except for the two towns, moved to the second stage of reopening on June 25 after being held back because of the farm outbreaks.

Meanwhile Monday, leaders of Ontario’s largest cities and regions said upper levels of government must stop “wrangling” and provide immediate financial support to municipalities coping with massive pandemic-related costs.

The municipal leaders said $10 billion in aid is needed for communities across the country, and federal and provincial governments must resolve their differences before tax increases, service cuts, and fee hikes are forced upon communities.

The Large Urban Mayors’ Caucus of Ontario, the Association of Municipalities of Ontario, and the Mayors and Regional Chairs of Ontario penned a joint statement Monday to ratchet up pressure on the governments to come to a resolution.

“Our residents need support now,” the groups said in a statement. “The time is up for federal-provincial wrangling about how to share the costs.”

The groups’ request comes halfway through the municipal budget year, and they said time is running out for a commitment. They’re urging the federal government to address the issue in a fiscal update set for Wednesday.

The COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in hundreds of millions of dollars in additional costs and lost income for towns and cities, including steeply declining transit revenues.

“Municipalities have no choice but to consider plans to balance the budget by raising property taxes, user fees and charges or cutting services,” the groups said. “Difficult conversations about cost-saving service reductions are taking place at council meetings across the province.”

Some councils are considering cancelling transit services, reducing public health, fire and police services, and closing parks and cultural sites to cut costs, they said.

Not allowed to run deficits by law, municipalities across Ontario have already been laying off thousands of staff during the pandemic.

Last month, the chairman of the Large Urban Mayors’ Caucus, Cam Guthrie, said while calls for funding have been met positively by the federal and provincial governments, mayors are concerned that the longer talks drag on between the two upper levels of government, the harder the recovery will be for municipalities.

Toronto Mayor John Tory has said his city is facing at least $1.5 billion in cost pressures this year because of the pandemic.

Mississauga Mayor Bonnie Crombie said her city has already had to make difficult decisions because of financial pressures related to COVID-19, including laying off 2,000 staff.

Crombie estimated that the pandemic is costing her city $20 million a month.

Ontario reported 154 new cases of COVID-19 on Monday, along with 160 newly resolved cases.

The province also saw no new deaths due to the virus over the previous day, the first time that has happened since late March.

The total number of cases now stands at 35,948, which includes 31,426 marked as resolved and 2,689 deaths.

The province completed roughly 17,303 tests for the novel coronavirus over the previous 24 hours.

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