Tuesday, October 05, 2021

Edmonton Public Schools calls for firebreak COVID-19 measures, including closure of all schools

Author of the article: Anna Junker
Publishing date: Oct 05, 2021 •
Edmonton Public Schools board chairwoman Trisha Estabrooks discusses the division's 2021-22 back to school plan during a news conference in Edmonton on Monday Aug. 16, 2021.
 PHOTO BY DAVID BLOOM /Postmedia

Edmonton Public Schools is calling on the province to implement firebreak COVID-19 public health measures that would see the closure of all schools in the province.

The recommendation, brought forward Tuesday, asks for all schools to move to online classes for a minimum of two weeks

Board chair Trisha Estabrooks said the division does not have the jurisdiction to close schools themselves, and she agonized over whether to vote for the firebreak recommendation.

“I feel like we’re letting families and kids down. I’ve spoken to families and parents, we’re lifelines, schools are literally lifelines for these families,” she said.

“Families continue to suffer because of a lack of information and clarity, and I just keep saying it didn’t have to be this way. Kids are suffering when they have their pediatric cancer surgeries canceled, for crying out loud. If that’s not an indicator of a crisis in our province, I don’t know what else is.”

If the province were to close schools, the board is also asking for notice in advance of any closure as well as financial support for families. The recommendation is one of four passed by trustees during a special board meeting on Tuesday.

Other trustees also had strong words about having to be in the position to advocate for the Alberta government to take action to address the fourth wave of COVID-19.

Trustee Nathan Ip said sometimes he feels like he is living in the Twilight Zone, having to make decisions like these during a public health crisis.

“I do feel compelled to take a moment to call out our provincial government, because it is a spectacular abdication of responsibility and failure of leadership,” he said.

“There is really no two ways about it. School boards have been left in the dark for weeks and months.”

Speaking after the board meeting, Estabrooks said she believes the division wouldn’t have had to call for a firebreak if the province had reinstated notification of positive cases, contact tracing and isolation when the school year began.

“I highly doubt we would be in this situation, and so it didn’t have to be this way and this is an absolute last resort,” she said.

“I’m a parent myself, I speak to many parents on a daily basis, no one wants to be in this situation, but at what point do we recognize that this is just not sustainable?”

She noted the division has been very clear in their ask of the province to share COVID-19 information.

“These are the measures that worked last year,” she said. “I continue to be frustrated and a little baffled, quite frankly, why we’re not seeing those measures put in place.”

The second recommendation trustees passed was to continue to advocate for testing, tracing and isolating of COVID-19 cases in schools and resume notification by Alberta Health Services of positive cases.

However, during an update on COVID-19 Tuesday afternoon Education Minister Adriana LaGrange said the province is reinstating contact tracing.


In the interim, beginning Oct. 12, school authorities will determine close contacts of individuals who were infectious while attending school, and they will notify families of those close contacts. By mid-November, Alberta Health Services (AHS) will take over identification of close contacts.

“School authorities will help this AHS team to identify close contacts and will focus on school-based exposures only, such as identifying classroom contacts and close contacts through participation in school sports or extracurricular activities,” she said.

“Contact notification will not extend to positive cases, community activities or out of school contacts.”

When asked about the call for a two-week shutdown and why it took so long for the government to reinstate contact tracing, LaGrange said they have been monitoring the situation closely, added other measures to keep students safe, and “will continue to do what is required to keep our students and our staff safe.”

Edmonton Public is also calling for HEPA units to be used in classrooms for increased ventilation and air quality, and to call for the province to provide rapid COVID-19 tests to families that can be used at home.


However, the province will seek six million rapid antigen tests to help parents administer two tests per week to unvaccinated children, beginning in high-priority areas such as schools that are experiencing an outbreak and under-vaccinated areas.



LaGrange said those in kindergarten to Grade 6 will be offered the program in schools experiencing outbreaks of 10 or more cases of COVID-19.

“Every student and staff member at these schools will be able to access tests for free,” she said.

As of Monday, there were 699 self-reported COVID-19 cases across 175 schools since school began in September, Supt. Darrel Robertson said.

About 67 per cent of those are in kindergarten to Grade 6, 11 per cent are in grades 7 to 9 and 13 per cent are in grades 10 to 12.

There are also 55 cases of COVID-19 among staff.

Meanwhile, Edmonton Catholic Schools announced Tuesday it would be mandating vaccines for all employees. They have until Oct. 25 to be fully vaccinated, unless they require an accommodation under the Alberta Human Rights Act or participate in a regular, rapid COVID-19 testing program.


Others who are in direct contact with students and/or employees must also be fully vaccinated in order to enter a division property, including contractors and volunteers.

With files from Ashley Joannou

  

Alberta to resume contact tracing in schools, provide rapid testing kits to families

Some critics say return of contact tracing

 comes too late

Edmonton Public Schools knows of 699 cases in 175 schools, with 67 per cent in the kindergarten to Grade 6 grades, where students still aren't eligible for COVID-19 vaccinations, but suspects there are many more. (Codie McLachlan)

The Alberta government is bringing back contact tracing in schools and plans to provide rapid testing kits to help parents in outbreak areas test their children twice a week at home. 

Education Minister Adriana LaGrange announced Tuesday that schools will start notifying close contacts of students who were infectious at school.

The shift comes with the province in the midst of a deadly fourth wave of COVID-19 that has overwhelmed the province's hospitals and ICUs and forced the government to accept medical help from the Canadian Armed Forces, the Red Cross and other provinces. 

Alberta Health Services had stopped notifying schools of positive test results so districts were relying on parents to tell them if their children fall ill.  

Some school boards and other advocacy groups have been calling for contact tracing and other measures since the beginning of the school year. Now, some critics say Tuesday's announcement comes too late.

At a news conference Tuesday, LaGrange defended her government's COVID-19 approach for schools.

"We started the year with very strong protocols," she said, listing the masking and cohorting measures already in place.

"We will continue to monitor very, very closely, and if additional measures are required we will absolutely do that."

Public list of schools on outbreak

On Wednesday, Alberta Health will start publicly listing schools that have more than two students who were infectious while in school.

Alerts will be issued if a school has two to four cases, or five to nine cases. If a school has 10 or more cases, an outbreak will be declared. This is a shift from the province's previous requirement that 10 per cent of a school population be infected with COVID-19 before an outbreak would be declared.

Alberta Health Services will investigate all outbreaks at schools within a two-week period. 

Contact tracing

Beginning Oct. 12, parents will be informed if their child may have been exposed to COVID-19 at school. Initially, school authorities will handle contact tracing and notification using data supplied by Alberta Health Services. 

Alberta Health Services will take over contact tracing in schools by the middle of November. At that point, an online map will be available where parents will be able to view alerts and outbreaks at schools. 

Students in Kindergarten to Grade 6 will move to online learning from home if there are three or more infectious cases in a class in a five-day period. Families of students in a class that gets sent home will be asked to avoid public places, monitor for symptoms, and get tested if a child starts showing symptoms. The families will not be required to otherwise quarantine. 

Rapid tests for Kindergarten to Grade 6

Officials also announced a targeted rapid testing program for Kindergarten to Grade 6 schools as vaccines aren't yet available to students in that age group. 

The province will start handing out tests in late October at schools that are on outbreak status. Tests will be distributed to staff and parents. The rapid tests are voluntary, and are to be done at home as a screening tool for students who are asymptomatic.

The province is also encouraging school districts to enact mandatory vaccination policies for staff.

LaGrange says the province can't enact a similar policy for students because they cannot be denied access to schools. 

Return of contact tracing welcomed

Calgary Board of Education Superintendent Christopher Usih said he welcomes news that contact tracing will return. 

"We've had situations where families have expressed concerns around the self-notification option that was in place because it was very difficult to establish the veracity of that information and even to know whether or not we're getting full compliance around that piece," Usih said. 

He was also pleased to see the change in classifying an outbreak at 10 students rather than 10 per cent of students.

No 'firebreak'

Earlier on Tuesday, Edmonton Public School Board trustees passed a motion calling on the province to reinstate case notification, contact tracing and isolation of close contacts in schools, to enact provincial ventilation standards and for Alberta Education to purchase specialized air filters for classrooms that meet standards set by experts. 

WATCH | "It didn't have to be this way," says board chair Trisha Estabrooks

Edmonton Public Schools board chair Trisha Estabrooks says the provincial government should have prioritized in-person learning from the planning stages. 5:08

Trustees also called for a "firebreak" — a two-week minimum closure of all Alberta schools in an effort to prevent further spread of COVID-19. Districts are not able to close schools without the permission of Alberta Education. 

"On the one hand I'm glad they're putting these measures in place, on the other hand I fear that it is too late," said Edmonton Public School Board trustee Shelagh Dunn on Tuesday evening.

Dunn said Tuesday that none of the trustees want to see schools closed and that they know the disruption in learning wouldn't be good for students. But she said it feels like the time for last resort measures have arrived.

"However, there's been such a lack of provincial leadership in this situation, and the case numbers are so great and the impact on our hospitals is frightening to watch."

Dunn's own son got COVID-19 during an outbreak that saw nearly a quarter of the students in his school test positive. 

"It really threw our community into chaos. There was no contact tracing by AHS, there was no notification to the school about cases other than those that parents were calling in themselves. And it did happen really quickly," she said.

Reacting to LaGrange's announcement, NDP education critic Sarah Hoffman called the measures "too little, too late," and said the government has dumped the burden of contact tracing onto school staff.

But Hoffman stopped short of calling for moving classes online, and said she thinks schools should be the last place to be shut down. She said that's why she has called on the province to ask the Canadian Armed Forces for personnel to help with contact tracing. 

"To say 'we're going to take another six weeks to set up a contact tracing system' I don't think is good enough. I think if they do see the urgency here, if the UCP sees the urgency, they need to call in the help."

With files from Paige Parsons and Lucie Edwardson


Province vows to help schools with phased-in contact tracing, rapid tests as COVID cases soar in kids

'These measures were needed a month ago, and the urgency was there to act long before now,' said Medeana Moussa, spokeswoman for the Support Our Students advocacy group

Author of the article :Eva Ferguson
CALGARY HERALD
Publishing date:Oct 05, 2021 • 
Students exit Western Canada High School at the end of a school day on Tuesday, October 5, 2021. 
PHOTO BY AZIN GHAFFARI/POSTMEDIA

Weeks after the start of the school year and long after school boards and parents pleaded for help, the UCP government is finally vowing to support schools with phased-in contact tracing and rapid tests as COVID cases in kids continue to soar.

But questions remain as to whether the help is too little too late, and how much support will arrive exactly when, with promises of “after Thanksgiving,” “late October,” and “mid-November.”


Education Minister Adriana LaGrange announced phased-in support from Alberta Health Services to help schools with contact tracing, identifying positive cases and notifying close contacts.

“This fourth wave has made things challenging, especially for families of children not yet eligible for vaccine,” LaGrange said.

“We’ve always committed to monitoring the pandemic and making changes to ensure in-person learning can continue safely.”

But phased-in contact tracing won’t begin until after the Thanksgiving long weekend, and will still require help from school authorities until the middle of next month.

Dr. Deena Hinshaw, chief medical officer of health, said it will take at least four to six weeks to recruit and hire the contact tracers required to do the work.

“It’s not that easy to just flick a switch,” LaGrange said, saying AHS won’t fully take over contact tracing until mid-November.

As well, close contacts will only be required to isolate for 10 days if there are three or more cases in a classroom. That protocol still differs from last year when an entire classroom would have to isolate when just one case was identified.

Parents have been demanding full reinstatement of AHS reporting, contact tracing and isolating since early August, when Support Our Students issued a news release asking for more robust safety protocols.

And on Sept. 17, the Calgary Board of Education sent a letter to LaGrange demanding the return of contact tracing and more supports from AHS.

“These measures were needed a month ago, and the urgency was there to act long before now,” said Medeana Moussa, spokeswoman for the Support Our Students advocacy group.

“The UCP government’s refusal to act sooner has all but caused this fourth wave and the terrible health crisis Alberta now finds itself in.”

As COVID cases surge and hospitals struggle with capacity, provincial data shows Alberta kids aged 5 to 11 years of age are hitting a seven-day average of 68 cases per 100,000, the highest for that demographic since the start of the pandemic.

The next highest peak occurred during the third wave, in May, when kids aged 5 to 11 years hit a seven-day average of 54 cases per 100,000.



The province says it will also ramp up rapid testing in schools, but that support won’t come until “late October” when tests will be provided to parents and staff connected to schools that are in outbreak status with 10 or more cases of COVID-19.

The AHS will now be reporting COVID case numbers in schools across Alberta on its website.

The UCP government is also encouraging school authorities to develop policies that require proof of vaccination or a negative COVID-19 test for teachers, staff and anyone who enters a school.

The call comes days after Premier Jason Kenney said only school districts can issue vaccine mandates as employers of school staff, not the province.

The CBE announced Tuesday that all employees and CBE partners must be fully vaccinated against COVID-19 by Dec. 17, including contracted service providers, tenants and all volunteers.

The board is providing more than two months as a transition period to give individuals time to declare their vaccine status and comply.

Meanwhile, the Calgary Catholic School District is expected to discuss similar legislation for its employees at a board meeting Wednesday.

Still, parents continue to be fearful of taking kids to school, wondering whether even if they aren’t sick, they’re spreading the virus to family members at a time when the highly contagious Delta variant is infecting both vaccinated and unvaccinated people.

Moussa added parents are frustrated with the lack of leadership and slow movement on COVID and rising cases in schools by the UCP government.

“The province could have easily implemented these protocols to ensure that schools remain safe,” Moussa said.

“Instead, they have allowed the Delta variant to rip through schools, download responsibility, point fingers at school districts and continue to be a government that refuses to govern.”

Meanwhile, 10 vaccination clinics at Calgary schools are among 300-plus clinics that have been cancelled across the province due to a lack of consent.

As of Sept. 28, approximately 221 in-school COVID-19 immunization clinics had been completed in Alberta, 128 of those in Calgary, and 438 were still planned.

In-school clinics are scheduled to continue until Oct. 15.

  

Braid: Late again, UCP tries to get a grip on COVID chaos in schools

The UCP clings to its own myths until there’s no choice but to act, too late every time

Author of the article: Don Braid • Calgary Herald
Publishing date: Oct 05, 2021 •
Students exit Western Canada High School at the end of a school day on Tuesday, October 5, 2021. 
Azin Ghaffari/Postmedia
Article content

While the Kenney government was working up its latest COVID-19 plan Monday and Tuesday, 26 more people died and a lot of children got sick.

Remember when the government said the dying was ending? Remember when they said young kids weren’t at much risk?

At this moment, children from five to 11 years old make up one-quarter of reported cases. Schools will now go back to contact tracing, rebranded as “contact notification.”

But teachers will do some of it themselves because the government took down the school tracing system, despite begging from educators everywhere to keep it running.

The policy shift in the “greatest summer,” when the UCP went into pandemic denial, caused COVID chaos in the school systems.

Undeniably, it also caused more kids to catch the virus, which they will now be spreading outside the schools.

This is what one school board east of Edmonton told teachers only weeks ago: “At the direction of the chief medical officer of health, Alberta Health Services will no longer notify close contacts of potential COVID-19 exposures including close contacts in school.”

And then — if you can believe this — the notice said: “Due to privacy law, we cannot ask or disclose if students and staff are exposed or positive.”

Teachers were actively prohibited from telling any child, or parent, if there were sick kids in the classroom.

The teacher also could not be told if any child was sick. The kids couldn’t tell each other.

One teacher said: “I don’t even get to know if any kids in my class have COVID. Ridiculous!”

That was a policy petri dish for COVID-19.


Now, information sharing is back, the latest of the government’s wild gyrations during this crisis.

NDP education critic Sarah Hoffman was even more fierce than usual when she said Tuesday: “The COVID situation in Alberta schools has spiralled out of control due to the gross negligence of (Education Minister) Adriana LaGrange and every one of the UCP MLAs who remained silent while the virus tore through the schools in their communities.

“For the first time today, the premier spoke about the rapid spread of COVID among children.


“For months, we have known about the spread of COVID ramping up among school-aged children but the UCP has always dismissed the risk to young Albertans.”


In May 2020, when infections were falling, Premier Jason Kenney told the legislature: “What we are learning is that younger people, although not completely immune, have a rate of mortality related to COVID that is no higher than their general mortality rate from other illnesses.”

By saying that kids are “not completely immune,” the premier suggested they are partly immune, which is clearly not true.

Premier Jason Kenney announces Alberta’s reopening plan in Edmonton on Wednesday, May 26, 2021.
 PHOTO BY CHRIS SCHWARZ/GOVERNMENT OF ALBERTA

The virus has evolved, obviously. What’s shocking is how the government doesn’t evolve along with it. The UCP clings to its own myths until there’s no choice but to act, too late every time.

Sun columnist Rick Bell asked Kenney on Tuesday how he could regain trust. The premier didn’t even pretend to respond.


But it’s an important question, because a government that isn’t trusted is much less likely to be obeyed.

If the new measures announced Tuesday are simply scorned and flouted, Thanksgiving 2021 will give the virus an even bigger boost than it did last year.

They’re asking unvaccinated people not to gather indoors and limiting the vaccinated to 10 people over 12 years old, from only two families. The outdoor gathering limit has been dropped from 200 people to 20.

The indoor rule is especially hard for families longing to gather.

And yet, to paraphrase the risqué old British saying, people should close their eyes and think of Alberta. Defying the government will only make everything worse.

Don Braid’s column appears regularly in the Herald

Twitter: @DonBraid

Facebook: Don Braid Politics


Contact tracing coming back to Alberta schools

BY SAIF KAISAR AND HANA MAE NASSAR
Posted Oct 5, 2021
 
FILE (CityNews)

SUMMARY


Alberta appears to be changing course on contact tracing in schools


Sources confirm to 660 NEWS the province will be bringing contact tracing back to classrooms


Contact tracing in schools ended when other COVID-19 measures were scaled back over the summer



CALGARY (660 NEWS) – Contact tracing will be coming back to Alberta schools, government sources have confirmed to 660 NEWS.

The province is expected to make the official announcement at 3:30 p.m. on Tuesday.

Premier Jason Kenney will be joined by Health Minister Jason Copping, Education Minister Adriana LaGrange, Chief Medical Officer of Health Dr. Deena Hinshaw, and Alberta Health Services President and CEO Dr. Verna Yiu for the announcement.

The return of contact tracing comes as Alberta continues to struggle with increasing COVID-19 case loads.

Contact tracing had been taking place in schools last semester. However, as part of changes when restrictions were loosened this summer, those measures were scaled back in classrooms.

Many had been calling for the province to reinstate contact tracing, as well as other measures, as more students got sick.



Though the situation in Alberta continues to be dire, the province reported on Monday a slight drop in the number of critically ill COVID-19 patients in hospital.

On Monday, an infectious diseases expert urged people to continue to take every precaution possible, saying COVID-19 could still be something we are dealing with for decades to come.

Experts continue to urge people to get vaccinated if they can, to protect those around them, including children who are not eligible for a shot yet.

Contact tracing coming back to Alberta schools


BY ANGELA STEWART AND TOM ROSS
Posted Oct 5, 2021

An empty teacher's desk is seen at the front of a empty classroom at McGee Secondary school in Vancouver on September 5, 2014. Alberta is planning to reopen schools in the province this fall even as cases of COVID-19 in the province continue to grow. 
THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jonathan Hayward


CALGARY (660 NEWS) – After months of pressure coming from school advocacy groups and parents, the province has decided to reinstate contact tracing in schools across Alberta.

“We have always maintained that our first priority is the safety and security of our students and staff and that will always be our number one priority,” said Adriana LaGrange, Education Minister.

“We started the year with very strong protocols. [In] mid-September, when there was a state of emergency, we added additional masking for grades four and up and all staff. We have also implemented cohorting for K-6 schools.”
Parents will soon be able to have a better idea if their child has been exposed to a positive COVID-19 case in school, but it won’t be taking effect right away.

“It’s not that easy to just flick a switch and start contract tracing again. We are going to have contact notification starting next week,” said LaGrange.

The province expects tracing will be back up and running in about four to six weeks.

More staff will need to be hired before complete tracing actives can resume.

Rapid testing will also be offered to start with K-6 classes in schools that experience outbreaks.

“We will continue to monitor very, very closely and if additional measures are required, we will absolutely do that.”

“Right now, we have nine schools that have transitioned to online learning for operational reasons,” added LaGrange.
The free kits will need to be picked up at the schools.


New gathering restrictions in place, 663 new COVID-19 cases


BY ANGELA STEWART
Posted Oct 5, 2021

This undated electron microscope image made available by the U.S. National Institutes of Health in February 2020 shows the Novel Coronavirus SARS-CoV-2, yellow, emerging from the surface of cells, blue/pink, cultured in the lab. Also known as 2019-nCoV, the virus causes COVID-19. Ontario is reporting three new cases of the novel coronavirus today, bringing the total in the province to 18.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/AP-NIAID-RML via AP

CALGARY (660 NEWS) – The province is announcing new gathering restrictions in time for Thanksgiving.

Starting Monday, those who are unvaccinated will no longer be able to gather indoors. However, vaccinated people can have an indoor gathering with up to 10 people.


When it comes to outdoor gatherings, those restrictions have been dropped from 200 guests to 20.

Albertans are being urged to follow the rules this Thanksgiving weekend.

“Our hospitals and front-line teams do not have the capacity to handle another significant spike in cases,” said Dr. Verna Yiu Tuesday afternoon.

When it comes to new COVID-19 cases in the province, 663 new cases have been confirmed.



In the last 24 hours, 8,018 tests were completed.

Sadly, 26 more people have died from COVID-19 related complications.

There are 1,094 people in the hospital — and of those, 252 are in the ICU.

Alberta has 19,456 active cases province-wide.

COVID-19 vaccines mandatory for CBE employees



BY 660 NEWS STAFF
Posted Oct 5, 2021

FILE - In this Jan. 21, 2021 file photo a medical staff member prepares the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine at Tudor Ranch in Mecca, Calif. With vaccination against COVID-19 in full swing, social platforms like Facebook, Instagram and Twitter say they’ve stepped up their fight against misinformation that aims to undermine trust in the vaccines.
 (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong, File)

CALGARY (660 NEWS) – The Calgary Board of Education (CBE) is mandating COVID-19 vaccines for all its employees, volunteers, and other CBE partners.

The news comes as the Edmonton School Board made it mandatory that all employees be vaccinated against the virus.

READ MORE: Alberta teachers support mandatory vaccination policy for educational staff

The mandate will not take effect until Dec. 17.

RELATED: Contact tracing coming back to Alberta schools

CBE Superintendent Christopher Usih says there will be a transition period to allow people to declare their vaccine status.

More information regarding vaccine declaration dates, the short-term process for rapid testing for staff and specifics on exemption will be coming soon.

Students are encouraged to get vaccinated as well, but it is not a requirement.
'Alberta is at the edge of a precipice': Kenney, Copping invited to tour ICUs

Dave Dormer
CTVNewsCalgary.ca Digital Producer
Follow Contact
Updated Oct. 5, 2021 

CALGARY -

The head of emergency medicine for the Alberta Medical Association is inviting Premier Jason Kenney and Health Minister Jason Copping to tour an Edmonton-area ICU to "break the disconnect" between political policy and reality.

"We’ve been told, through the endless months of this relentless pandemic, to keep our distance to stay safe. From the outside, where life feels almost normal, it is understandable to want to keep your distance from the unfathomable horrors we face in the hospitals everyday," Dr. Paul Parks wrote in a letter sent to Kenney and Copping on Monday.

"Maintaining distance is necessary to get through this pandemic, but when policy leaders maintain distance from the hospitals where policy is implemented, an adaptive mechanism becomes harmful. To break the disconnect, we urgently need you to see what we are experiencing. We would like to formally invite you to come visit an Edmonton area ICU as soon as possible to see it for yourselves."

The letter was also sent to Alberta's Chief Medical Officer of Health Dr. Deena Hinshaw and Alberta Health Services CEO Dr. Verna Yiu, as well as the medical director and clinical department head for the Edmonton zone and the chief of staff to the minister of health.

"Health care workers are doing all they can with every fibre of their being, but human capacity is not an infinitely renewable resource," it read.

"We feel we should warn you that health care workers are adept at creating an appearance of order and control in the face of 'chaos.' Critical care teams are trained to manage even the most life-threatening situations in a calm and controlled manner.

Premier Jason Kenney, left, and Health Minister Jason Copping have been invited to tour an Edmonton-area ICU by the head of the Alberta Medical Association. (File photos)

"You won’t see people running around in a panic, but please ask every single person working in a hospital what they are facing. Have them walk you through what is normal, and what is extraordinary. We suggest starting with the main ICU to get a sense of the layout of a normal unit, before moving on to the rest of the hospital where 'overflow ICUs' have been set up. You’ll quickly see that the ICUs around Edmonton have had to expand into spaces that are increasingly more challenging to care for critically ill patients."

The letter adds Kenney and Copping need to "see, to hear, to understand what is happening in our hospitals right now."

"The distance between numbers on a page and the reality inside these walls is impossible to bridge unless you can see for yourselves what we have been trying to communicate to your government and the public," it read.

"Alberta is at the edge of a precipice, but it is a precipice that right now only we can see. Please let us show it to you."

Asked about the letter during Tuesday's update on COVID-19, Kenney said he had not seen the letter and that he would find it inappropriate for people to visit a hospital setting outside of a need for health care.

Copping said he had seen the letter and was working to set up a virtual meeting with Parks.


In a statement, Alberta Health spokesperson Steve Buick said Copping and Kenney "are very familiar with the situation in the hospitals and deeply grateful to the physicians, nurses, and other staff working in ICU and other areas."

"Minister Copping receives updates directly from AHS CEO Dr. Verna Yiu on a daily basis and sometimes more often. Dr. Yiu has shared with the minister in detail the pressure on the ICUs and the challenges of expanding capacity described in Dr. Parks’ letter," it read.

"The minister and premier are both willing to visit a hospital to show their appreciation, but this is not an appropriate time given the strict limits on visitors due to the current high level of transmission of COVID-19, as well as the pressure on the hospitals, especially the ICUs.


"We’ll work with AHS to arrange an appropriate time for a visit when it would not risk being perceived as a risk to vulnerable patients or a distraction to the staff."

On Tuesday, the province announced 663 new COVID-19 cases, along with 26 deaths, increasing the province’s death toll to 2,778 since March of 2020.

Alberta has 19,456 active cases and 1,094 patients in hospital, including 252 in intensive care.

Out of eligible Albertans, 84.5 per cent have one dose and 75.1 per cent have two.

Since the end of August, AHS has also had to delay or postpone roughly 8,500 surgeries across the province, including 805 pediatric surgeries due to the fourth wave of COVID-19. During that same time period, AHS completed 9,100 surgeries, including 3,500 emergency surgeries, and 1,100 cancer surgeries.


Alberta COVID situation goes from bad to worse


(ANNews) - About three months after Premier Jason Kenney exclaimed that Alberta was “open for summer," COVID case counts in the province have been on an upward trajectory.

While Ontario cautiously kept many of its public health measures in place, Alberta’s government ended all COVID restrictions, including a province-wide mask mandate, on July 1.

Now Alberta has the highest rate of infections in Canada, with the most recent seven-day-average as of Oct. 1 at 1,635 cases. As of Sept. 30, Ontario — with about triple the population of Alberta — had a seven-day-average of 597 cases.

On Sept. 29, Alberta hit its highest number of ICU admissions throughout the pandemic with 264 patients, with the Canadian Red Cross and Canadian Armed Forces coming to assist overburdened hospital staff. Ontario hasn’t logged more than 169 ICU admissions since Sept. 3.

The only province with a greater percentage of its population dying of COVID over the past two weeks is Saskatchewan.

University of Alberta infectious diseases professor Dr. Ilan Schwartz says Alberta’s government has “completely abdicated its responsibility” to keep the public safe from COVID.

"Alberta was reckless in dropping all restrictions and declaring the pandemic over. Jason Kenney infamously declared that we were in the post-pandemic era, that COVID was no longer a risk and basically threw caution to the wind — that was a grave misstep," he told the CBC.

"But what made things much, much worse is the inability to respond to the data that demonstrated a rising number of cases."

At this point, Alberta’s healthcare system has “completely collapsed,” Schwartz added.

"It's not just that we're on the verge of collapse, I think that's misleading at this point — we've completely collapsed,” he said.

Schwartz says overcrowded ICU units have created a “completely dysfunctional healthcare system.”

"People might think that they're vaccinated, and so they don't need to worry about this. But the fact is that if we can't provide safe ICU care, period, then everybody is at risk,” said Schwartz.

"Every time people get on a tractor, or get in a car, and go on the highway — there's always been risk associated with that — but now there's no safety net."

Jeremy Appel, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, Alberta Native News

COVID-19: Alberta NDP calls for cancelled surgery numbers to be included in daily updates; ICU cases see slight drop

Author of the article: Hamdi Issawi
Publishing date: Oct 04, 2021
Alberta Health Services staff in Calgary work on patients in a crowded intensive care unit. 
PHOTO BY SUPPLIED /Alberta Health Services

Alberta is reporting a slight drop in the number of critically ill COVID-19 patients as Canadian military nursing staff expect to start working in the province’s hospitals mid-week.


On Monday, the provincial government reported 1,079 Albertans in hospital, which amounts to 13 more patients since Friday, but six fewer patients in the province’s intensive care units, where 257 Albertans are fighting the disease.

Alberta’s Health Services has seen more than 1,000 new daily COVID-19 cases for weeks, and has had to scramble and reassign staff to handle the surge of intensive care patients.



Premier Jason Kenney announced last week that his government was finalizing the deal for outside support from the military.

Capt. Bonnie Wilken, public affairs officer for the Canadian Armed forces, said the military has a senior nursing officer on the ground in Edmonton who is working with the provincial health authority to integrate her team.

“The critical care nursing officers are conducting their integration and expected to start getting scheduled for shifts midweek,” Wilken wrote in an email statement to Postmedia.

Since Friday, the province identified 4,037 new cases of COVID-19, including 1,629 cases on Friday, 1,282 on Saturday, and 1,126 on Sunday — a downward trend since the province implemented new public health measures a little more than two weeks ago.

The government also reported 21 deaths since Friday, which raises the provincial death toll to 2,752.



Meanwhile, the NDP is calling for the number of surgeries that have been cancelled due to the pandemic to be included as part of Alberta’s daily COVID-19 data.

The province has been forced to cancel surgeries it considers non-urgent to make room for the influx of COVID-19 patients.

Fort Saskatchewan’s Jennifer Wood’s 16-month-old daughter Robin has a condition that causes her to burn significantly more calories than most children, and doctors have told her parents that she needs a surgically-inserted feeding tube. She also needs surgeries on her eyes and hips.

The feeding-tube surgery, originally scheduled for mid-September, was cancelled and has not been rescheduled, Jennifer said at an NDP press conference Monday.

Robin currently uses a feeding tube that has to be inserted everyday but her mom says that is only meant for short-term use.

“This is so difficult for us. Our sweet baby girl is going to continue to struggle to gain weight and develop. She’s going to continue to have to work harder to see and her hips will remain unstable,” she said.

“This will delay her motor development,” Jennifer added. “The truth is we have no idea how long Robin will struggle to do the things the rest of us take for granted.”



NDP Leader Rachel Notley said making cancelled surgery numbers public would help encourage people to be vaccinated, by showing them the impact of COVID-19 cases in Alberta’s hospitals.

“I do honestly believe that there’s a lot of folks out there who are not vaccinated who are still persuadable,” she said.

“And so it’s about trying to put a face and a story to the idea that their decision not to get vaccinated doesn’t just mean that they may or may not dodge a bullet and be one of the people in the hospital getting treatment for COVID,” Notley said. “It means that people like Robin, babies like Robin, can’t get something like a feeding tube.”

Notley added the government should also release a detailed and properly-resourced “roadmap” for how the province is going to make up the surgical backlog.

“When the worst of the danger has passed, Alberta will still face a huge challenge in delivering all of these cancelled procedures to Albertans, reassessing so many patients and rescheduling surgeries,” Notley said.

“It will all be a very difficult task. It will require new resources, and it will require the UCP to work collaboratively with health-care professionals.”

— With files from the Canadian Press





‘BEST SUMMER EVER’ TAKES ITS TOLL ON JASON KENNEY AS ALBERTA PREMIER’S APPROVAL RATING TUMBLES


ALBERTA PREMIER JASON KENNEY IN A RECENT, MORE OPTIMISTIC, MOMENT
 (PHOTO: CHRIS SCHWARZ, GOVERNMENT OF ALBERTA).
Alberta Politics



DAVID CLIMENHAGA
POSTED ON OCTOBER 05, 2021, 1:28 AM

All of political Alberta was agog yesterday at the revelation 77 per cent of adult Albertans disapprove of Premier Jason Kenney’s leadership according to a recent online survey by ThinkHQ Public Affairs Inc.

The premier’s approval rating, which the Calgary-based polling company characterized as tumbling, has now reached 22 per cent, said ThinkHQ President Marc Henry, prompting the pollster to comment in the spirit of the pandemic moment that “Jason Kenney is a leader on life-support, and his prognosis is not good.”


ThinkHQ President Marc Henry (Photo: calgarycvo.org).

Indeed, the pandemic has plenty to do with it. “There is no doubt that COVID-19 is the origin of much of Kenney’s troubles,” Mr. Henry added, noting accurately that “in many respects, he has been the architect of his own misfortune.”

“The political gamble that was ‘The Best Summer Ever’ is now taking a punishing toll both politically for the leader and in real human costs for Albertans and the health care system,” Mr. Henry went on, to which one can only add a hearty, No Kidding!

“We have not seen a sitting premier with numbers this low in almost a decade,” Mr. Henry observed grimly on his company’s website. “Alison Redford resigned the day it was revealed her approval at the time had dropped to 18 per cent. That’s a ‘margin of error’ difference from Kenney’s results today.”

So there you have it, folks. It’s at least semi-official. Premier Kenney is now down there in Alison Redford territory and you can almost hear the whistle of the axe heading for his neck.

But at 22 per cent, I have to say I was surprised that many Albertans still approve of Mr. Kenney.

I’m not kidding. Matt Wolf and all the other United Conservative Party “issues managers” using a variety of aliases must be members of the Angus Reid Forum panel Mr. Henry used to get a number that high!

I’d bet you money the UCP’s own polling is considerably worse – at least, if they’re not so depressed they’ve stopped polling altogether.


Alberta Opposition NDP Leader and former premier Rachel Notley (Photo: David J. Climenhaga).

Indeed, a Sept. 20-27 survey by EKOS pegged support for Mr. Kenney’s handling of the COVID-19 pandemic at 11 per cent.

Now, you can argue that the two polls measure apples and oranges – approval of Mr. Kenney’s overall governing (very low) and approval of his efforts on the pandemic file (even lower) – but if you ask me, at this point the two questions are all but one and the same in the minds of most Albertans.

You don’t need a pollster to tell you Mr. Kenney isn’t very popular any more. All you have to do to is join a socially distanced line up for a grocery store cashier or a bank machine almost anywhere in Alberta to hear what folks have to say about our premier – which can be characterized as deep and abiding contempt.

Mr. Kenney was never an overwhelmingly popular premier, Mr. Henry noted in his commentary on the poll, which used a 1,116-member online panel and was in the field for three days from Wednesday to Friday last week.

Well, he’s even less so now. It’s worth noting that according to ThinkHQ, 61 per cent of the respondents were in the strongly disapprove category.

Perhaps worse, from the UCP perspective, Alberta NDP Leader Rachel Notley seems to be doing much better. “Kenney’s chief political rival … has seen public appraisals of her performance notch up slightly since July, currently sitting at 50 per cent approval (32 per cent strong approval) vs. 47 per cent disapproval (39 per cent strong).”


Former Alberta Conservative premier Alison Redford (Photo: David J. Climenhaga).

And there’s no safe demographic for Mr. Kenney. City and country … Edmonton and Calgary … women and men … oldsters and young people … rich and poor … nobody much likes the guy, according to ThinkHQ.

Well, these kind of numbers add up to existential-threat territory for the UCP, so despite the fragile truce Mr. Kenney cobbled together on Sept. 22 to keep his job, various factions of the disunited party will be sharpening their knives in hopes of saving their own hides.

Unfortunately for them, what might save an MLA’s skin in vaccine-refusenik rural Alberta isn’t necessarily the same thing as what could work in vaccine-affirming Calgary.

“The UCP is an electoral creature, sewn together from two rival conservative parties primarily to unseat the NDP government,” Mr. Henry observed in his commentary. “In the face of this prolonged and punishing pandemic, the creature is tearing itself apart at the stitches.”

Indeed, it is easy to conclude that the re-animation of the Wildrose Party as a well-funded right-wing threat to the Progressive Conservatives after the 2008 provincial election has created a permanent rift in Alberta’s conservative movement never really went away.

With the NDP increasingly established in the minds of so many Albertans as the party of the sensible centre and the cautious and competent Rachel Notley still at the helm, that could be very bad news for the parties of the right.

Bell: Kenney at 22%, Alberta premier sinks in COVID quicksand

Author of the article: Rick Bell
 CALGARY SUN
Publishing date: Oct 05, 2021
Premier Jason Kenney provided an update on COVID-19 and the ongoing work to protect public health at the McDougall Centre in Calgary on Tuesday, September 28, 2021. 
PHOTO BY DARREN MAKOWICHUK/POSTMEDIA
Article content

The nosecount is ugly.

Uglier than the previous ugly. The kind of ugly where you can’t talk your way out of the ugliness.


Back-against-the-wall ugly. Four-letter word ugly.

If the latest fresh-off-the-press poll by the well-respected ThinkHQ Public Affairs outfit is anything to go by, and it mirrors what a lot of folks are hearing these days, Jason Kenney is in more hurt than anybody who has had his job in the past and didn’t lose it.

Only 22% of Albertans show any approval for the premier. Only 6% show strong approval. Shortly before being frog-marched to the exit door former premier Alison Redford was at 18%.

Here are some numbers.

The Edmonton area? The approval for Kenney is 19%.

But watch this one. The Calgary area? The Calgary area, where the UCP romped in the last election, sits at 19% as well. Yikes.

The smaller cities? 25%. Northern Alberta? 24%.

It goes on. It’s painful.

Nowhere in Alberta does the man get more than 30%.

Men don’t like him. Women don’t like him. Young people don’t like him. Older people like him a little more but it’s so bad a little more is only one out of four of them.

It doesn’t seem to matter how much dough you make or much schooling you have, there is scant consolation in the arithmetic for a premier who refuses to take advice from those who might actually feel the pulse of the public better than he does.

You have to wonder what Kenney’s polls are telling him. Unless up is down and down is up on their graphs, the truth is the truth.

Or is Kenney convinced this is just a bump in the road, a big bump, but one day when COVID settles down he will emerge, leading his party to a wonderful victory?

No doubt there are the usual ring kissers and bootlickers bowing and scraping to the bossman, telling him what he wants to hear.

In the real world, disapproval of Kenney is quite the thing to see. You want strong disapproval of Kenney. That’s six out of 10 Albertans. STRONG disapproval.

You want to see more. Of course you do. Everybody wants a look at the trainwreck.

Among those who voted for Kenney’s United Conservative Party in the last election, only four in 10 back the premier’s performance.

NDP leader Rachel Notley has 3% more people approve of her than disapprove of her. That’s plus 3. 50% approve, 47% don’t.

Kenney is minus 55. Just 22% approve and 77% disapprove of him. One percentage point of those counted aren’t sure.

And how did it get this ugly?

The premier soldiering on and not even thinking he had to have a Plan B when his dream of the Best Summer Ever started turning into a nightmare and his government was missing in action.

This drove the nails deeper into his political coffin.

.
Premier Jason Kenney keeps a sharp eye on the prize as he shows off his pancake flipping skills at the annual Premier’s Stampede Breakfast in downtown Calgary on Monday, July 12, 2021. 
PHOTO BY GAVIN YOUNG/POSTMEDIA

There was a seven-point bump from April to July when COVID numbers were looking good and we were told we would be open for good.

Then it all came crashing down as Kenney fiddled and fumbled in the face of the virus. Approval dropped 16 points.

And let’s be honest. Even with all the promise of Best Summer Ever, Kenney still had only the backing of 38%.

The least popular premier. The least popular handling of COVID. Take a bow.

Yes, Kenney’s United Conservative Party was a marriage of convenience to defeat the NDP.


Mission accomplished.


Now the marriage shows signs of breaking apart and Kenney clings to power trying to put this Humpty Dumpty back together again.

Kenney was never real popular. But this is one hell of a fall from whatever grace he once may have enjoyed.

Can he ever come back?

“Jason Kenney is a leader on life support and his prognosis is not good,” says ThinkHQ’s Marc Henry.

“There is no doubt COVID is the origin of much of Kenney’s troubles but, in many respects, he has been the architect of his own misfortune.”

The full steam ahead Best Summer Ever gamble, the mixed messages on COVID, the man touted as a great leader but often not leading with confidence.

It is often said Kenney admires the British war prime minister Winston Churchill.

But, on this day and in this place and in this midst of this crisis, reality is confirmed.

It is an understatement to say he is no Winston Churchill.


rbell@postmedia.com


Leong: Alberta government offers unbelievable justification for COVID-19 inaction

Author of the article: Ricky Leong
CALGARY SUN
Publishing date:Oct 05, 2021 
Premier Jason Kenney speaks at the daily COVID-19 update with Alberta’s chief medical officer of health, Dr. Deena Hinshaw, on March 13, 2020. 
PHOTO BY ED KAISER /Postmedia file

Through much of the COVID-19 pandemic, Alberta officials have touted policies said to balance the need to prevent the spread of the novel coronavirus against the need to promote our overall physical and mental health.

From the end of the first wave of widespread infections, provincial politicians from Premier Jason Kenney on down have made a big deal about how Alberta has been among the freest jurisdictions in the country


They’ve continually reminded us of the United Conservative government’s light hand in its attempts to keep a lid on COVID-19, and instead pushed the need for personal responsibility.

Even Alberta’s top medical official, Dr. Deena Hinshaw, would often refer to the importance of our whole health in her public remarks when asked to justify policies that sometimes seemed insufficient given the circumstances of the time.

To a degree, I understand.

It was nice to find anything resembling normalcy after the various restrictions through the first couple of waves of COVID-19.

And this year, once we started getting vaccines into people’s arms, it was a huge relief to finally worry a little less about the potential risk of being exposed to the virus and falling ill.

But now, Alberta confronts the fourth wave of COVID-19 that’s filled our hospitals and intensive-care units in a way we’ve never experienced before — and in a way that isn’t really being experienced in many other parts of the country.

This unwelcome turn of events was completely preventable, the result of the government’s continual lack of promptness in instituting useful and meaningful public health measures to minimize the spread of the coronavirus.

This will, for some, come at the expense of our general health and well-being, despite our leaders’ claims to the contrary.

The UCP government’s conspicuous absence in August, as coronavirus infections began to mount and send people to the hospital in greater numbers, was just the latest and most acute instance of their mismanagement.

Whether because of an inflexible dedication to ideology, a need to pander to a political base, a leadership vacuum, or some combination of those things, the people in charge missed the opportunity to impose even modest measures to counteract COVID-19 and prevent the world of hurt we are in now.

By the time September rolled around, the government reinstated some public health measures but insisted it would not implement a COVID-19 vaccine passport program as an extra layer of protection for non-essential businesses.

As we all know, it eventually relented and did just that — but don’t you dare call it a vaccine passport. It’s a Restrictions Exemption Program.

And the government never took the time to prepare for it, either.

Other large provinces have had fully functional proof of vaccination programs for weeks and months as part of their successful efforts to keep COVID-19 at bay.

Meanwhile, in Alberta, we went from nothing, to easily forged vaccine certificates, to QR codes with no ability to scan them.

All the while, business owners are going through the unnecessary stress of having to keep up with a government that can’t keep up with the virus.

Parents are worried about younger kids tracking COVID-19 home from school while the government isn’t tracking COVID-19 in schools at all.

People needing medical care for what would normally be urgent issues must wait as the system makes room for people who’ve become severely ill but, ultimately, wouldn’t have become sick at all had the right government policies been in place.

And the government dares to tell us their COVID-19 decisions were to preserve our mental health and general well-being?

It’s just one more excuse to add to the heap of unbelievable justifications for the government’s inaction.

rleong@postmedia.com


Jason Kenney’s Lethal Negligence
His decisions have led to hundreds of deaths. Who will hold him accountable?


Andrew Nikiforuk 1 Oct 2021 | TheTyee.ca
Tyee contributing editor Andrew Nikiforuk is an award-winning journalist whose books and articles focus on epidemics, the energy industry, nature and more.
Alberta Premier Jason Kenney: Do his COVID-19 policies meet the test of ‘wanton or reckless disregard for the lives or safety of other persons’? Photo via Wikimedia.

In the last two weeks, the political decisions of the Kenney government have helped kill 192 Albertans with the Delta variant.

That’s more deaths than Newfoundland, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Quebec, Manitoba, Ontario and the Northwest Territories combined.

In just two days last week, the Kenney government contributed to the deaths of 64 citizens in Alberta’s overwhelmed hospitals.

If the pace continues, that’s the equivalent of four Humboldt bus crashes every two days.
The Tyee is supported by readers like you Join us and grow independent media in Canada


In the last month, the Kenney government’s laissez-faire policies saw 307 people buried compared to 24 COVID deaths last September.

For the record, this September was the third deadliest month of a pandemic in Alberta. Worse is on its way.

Since the province lifted all public health measures (everything from contract tracing to masks and school reporting), those decisions by Kenney have led to the deaths of nearly 500 people.

Alberta, along with Premier Scott Moe’s Saskatchewan, now own COVID-19 death rates (4.5 a day) that are three times greater than the rest of the country (1.5 a day).

Let me describe for a moment what this process looks like in graphic terms.

It begins with struggling for air. As the body’s oxygen level plummets, the patient enters the ICU for ventilation. Next comes intubation, a Foley catheter and rectal tube. Then the kidneys fail as the body swells with fluids. Blood clots and skin sloughing come next. The lucky get to say goodbye to their loved ones by cell phone. The whole horrific process may take six weeks.

But deaths only capture a fraction of the scale of the disaster. Thousands of Albertans with Long COVID; thousands of surgeries cancelled; thousands of burned-out health-care workers; thousands of infected children and overflowing pediatric wards.

And the entirely preventable horror goes on and on.

There is only one reason for the province’s new Death Advantage: the choices made by Premier Jason Kenney, his cabinet and chief medical officer of health.

Kenney, a fast-talking ideologue, has followed the same “personal freedom” path played by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis.

Last July that notorious Republican politician removed all public health measures for ideological reasons. By doing so he turned Florida’s hospital system, like Alberta’s, into a battlefield.

Since then, DeSantis ideology of slamming mask and vaccine mandates and trivializing the pandemic has killed more than 1,000 people a day.


Bestselling author Don Winslow was so appalled by Desantis’s disastrous leadership, he made a video on the public slaughter.

The video went viral. It explains that the Vietnam War killed 58,000 soldiers. But thanks to the neglect of DeSantis, COVID-19 will kill more people than that in Florida.

Alberta is not as populated as Florida, but Kenney’s decisions are having a Desantis-like impact. They may well destroy the province’s public health-care system.

Canada’s Criminal Code defines criminal negligence as anybody, who in discharging or failing to do their duties imposed by law, shows wanton or reckless disregard for the lives or safety of other persons.

In my view, that’s what Kenney, his cabinet and chief medical officer Deena Hinshaw have repeatedly done since July 1.

On that date they withdrew all public health measures too rapidly in the province with the nation’s lowest vaccination rates as the Delta variant began to surge.

Experts warned that the province was building a fourth wave.

Kenney ignored the best evidence on Delta transmission rates; denied the vulnerable state of unvaccinated children; neglected the importance of good ventilation in schools and workplaces; and downgraded the importance of masks.

He recklessly declared the pandemic over.

His government then attacked critics of its horrendously misguided policies including public health experts such as Amir Attaran, Joe Vipond and Lorian Hardcastle.

Every time Kenney now appears before the media, he engages in a reprehensible game of manipulation. He repeatedly blames, for example, the province’s full ICU units on the unvaccinated. Yet the premier and Hinshaw had three months to address the province’s low vaccination rates in central and northern Alberta. They patently ignored that sociological and anthropological challenge.

Instead, they pretended that “personal responsibility” and “choice” was a public health measure. It isn’t, and never will be.

“In a time of crisis — war, depression, natural disaster, health pandemic — an ideology that emphasizes the individual, the market and small government does not work,” is the reality recently acknowledged by political scientist Duane Bratt of Calgary’s Mount Royal University.

Yet Hinshaw said it was time to live with the virus while the premier vanished, apparently to Europe.

As a direct and immediate consequence, Kenney’s government abetted exponential viral growth. It made inevitable a fourth wave turned tsunami.

That predictable explosion has now killed hundreds of people, exhausted health-care workers and placed Albertans with cancer and other medical conditions in harm’s way. I call that criminal negligence.

To understand what removing all the public health measures really meant last July, consider this blunt analogy. A murderous drug cartel threatens a peaceful community.

The police do their job, make arrests and protect public safety. But then along comes Kenney. He removes the police, the courts and community helpers all in one fell swoop, promising “the best summer ever.” And then the killing begins.

And yet Kenney recently compared Alberta’s woes to COVID peaks in other provinces as just normal routine stuff.

“It is important to note that we are not the only province to have gone through such a challenging period during COVID,” he said.

Rubbish. Those peaks, also the product of negligent conservative governments, occurred long before the vaccines arrived.

Now Kenney is again getting the best advice — and rejecting it. He says he won’t introduce a “circuit breaker” lockdown to slow down transmission of the virus, as recommended by the Canadian Medical Association, because 20 per cent of the population won’t follow the rules.



Sorry, Not Sorry! Jason Kenney’s COVID-19 Disaster
READ MORE

That’s like saying we won’t have laws against homicide because a percentage of the population won’t follow them.

In normal times, a premier that has failed his people and province so spectacularly would resign. Not in today’s Alberta.

Kenney has refused to step down.

Nor does Kenney’s cowered and complicit party have the guts or courage to force the bully out.

Nor does the province’s sheepish media. They belatedly express shock at the rising toll but fail to demand Kenney pay for his actions. Their pulled punches make them accomplices. (Some notable exceptions include Markham Hislop, Robson Fletcher and Graham Thomson.)

That leaves the hard work to Albertans. They have two choices. They can serve as accomplices to the destruction of their province, or they can exercise their civic duties and daily call for the resignation of Jason Kenney.

The dying won’t stop, and the pandemic won’t end until the chaos maker goes.
Squid Game & The Rise Of Anti-Capitalist Entertainment

Laura Pitcher 5 hrs ago

At this point, if you haven’t watched Squid Game, chances are you’ve had it recommended to you countless times. The Korean drama is quickly becoming one of the most watched foreign language productions of all time and is currently the top show on Netflix in 90 countries. Netflix CEO Ted Sarandos has hypothesized that it might be their biggest show ever and a South Korean broadband firm has even sued Netflix after the intense traffic surge from the show.

So what is it about the gore-filled survival show – where cash-strapped contestants quite literally fight until death in childhood games for money while rich VIPs watch – that has captivated a gigantic audience globally? Perhaps it’s the fact that it’s barely fiction at all. Squid Game perfectly mirrors our social realities, exploring themes like class struggle and economic anxieties through one dramatic competition.

Squid Game follows a series of movies and television shows that have gained success recently for their critiques of capitalist society, including Korean smash-hit Parasite in 2019, co-written and directed by Bong Joon Ho. US satire Sorry to Bother You was also a critical success in 2018, proving a sustained thirst for anticapitalist entertainment.

This comes as little surprise when considering the growing shift away from capitalism in recent years, exacerbated by the financial struggles that arose during the global pandemic. It’s why people like Democrat Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez have risen to political stardom and socialism is officially part of the zeitgeist.

In an era where it’s cool to hate capitalism, the entertainment that critiques it has become cooler than ever. But does that amount to political progress? Anti-imperialist organizer Rhamier Balagoon for the Black Alliance for Peace says not. “Under capitalism, anything can become a commodity and ultimately de-radicalized,” they told Refinery29. “Hollywood, through corporate America, makes room for these performative gestures that allow people to romanticize the idea of resistance against a violent system.”

Balagoon is yet to watch Squid Game but sees the rise of anticapitalist entertainment as a way for liberals to dip a toe into seemingly radical discourse without taking part in organizing. Billionaire Jeff Bezos recently proved this point with a tweet saying he “can’t wait” to watch the show. The irony is not lost on many that Bezos’ own workers operate in often unsafe and poor working conditions.


Another indication that the radically anticapitalist messaging of Squid Game has gone over the heads of people is that many viewers are walking away from the show with the notion that the characters in the game “chose to be there,” despite them all coming from a place of poverty and life-threatening debt. This captures just how far we are from breaking down the current illusion of free will in a capitalist society; one of the show’s beloved characters, Ji-yeong, reveals that she has just been released from prison for killing her abusive father before entering the game.

“The idea of free will has very effectively been weaponized by white supremacist capitalism to gaslight people into believing that they are responsible for the shitty circumstances that capitalism puts them in,” says Bobo Matjila, online philosopher and co-host of the Bobo and Flex podcast. “A society that believes in free will also implicitly believes that everyone is responsible for their circumstances and material conditions despite how much they’ve been marginalized and oppressed by said society.”

CLASS CONCIOUSNESS IS UNDERSTANDING;
'WE ARE CAPITALISM' 

Balagoon agrees, saying that every person is still currently forced to participate in capitalism. “There’s no real way that we can opt out of it aside from a revolution that we can actually overturn the system,” they say. “You can be as anticapitalist as you want but at the end of the day you still need to wake up and go to work.”


To give due credit to Squid Game writer and director Hwang Dong-hyuk (who wrote the show in 2009 but was rejected by studios for 10 years and had to sell his laptop at one point due to financial struggles), much of the anticapitalist messaging seems to have been watered down in the English translation. In a viral Tiktok, Youngmi Mayer, co-host of the Feeling Asian podcast, explains that English-language viewers lost many nuances in crucial scenes like the marble scene in episode six, titled “Gganbu.” In the current English translation, Oh Il-nam says: “We share everything.” In Korean he says: “There’s no ownership between me and you.” It’s worth also noting that many translators are underpaid and overworked, which is why Mayer says “it’s the fault of the producers.”

Translation issues aside, the popularity of Squid Game, two years after Parasite, shows that anticapitalist entertainment is going nowhere, nor should it. New releases shouldn’t, however, be interpreted as progress that we haven’t yet made.

“As good as these shows are, I don’t think any of them are effective in shifting viewpoints because these shows are descriptive but not prescriptive,” says Matjila. “They do a great job of describing the horrors of existing under late-stage capitalism but they don’t do very much as far as prescribing a solution for these horrors.” As a result, Matjila says, we risk coming away from these shows feeling more politically active than we are.

Simply put, we should all continue to enjoy Squid Game and other similar shows that follow. We’re largely enjoying them because they’re so relatable. However, we should also be aware that anticapitalism is being remarketed to us by the billionaires at Netflix. And really, by watching the show, are we any better than the VIPs who lap up the entertainment? Perhaps that’s the most disturbing twist of all.