Contrary to the advice of labour and public health experts all over the world, Ontario Premier Doug Ford says that compensating low-income, frontline workers for their wages in the case that they are forced to self-isolate on account of COVID-19 isn't necessary.
His rationale? The feds are already offering
$500 a week to anyone in Canada who falls ill with the coronavirus — a whopping $450 per week after taxes, for a maximum of two weeks — and participation so far hasn't been great.
"If the system is not working, and that's what I'm hearing from the media... If people don't feel they are getting it quick enough, then we need to change the program," said Ford of the federal benefit during a press conference in Vaughan on Monday.
"And if they need to top it up a little more because $500 a week isn't feasible, then we change it" continued the premier addressing one criticism of the wage replacement program but failing to acknowledge that applicants
must still wait at times for weeks to access the funds.
"Let's be very, very clear there's no reason for the province to jump in there when less than 27 per cent of the overall program hasn't been taken up."
Toronto's Chief Medical Officer of Health, Mayor John Tory, and entire Board of Health — who today
passed a motion formally asking the province to ensure 10 paid sick days for all workers during infectious disease emergencies such as this one —
would beg to differ.
If there is one thing that Doug Ford has shown he is willing to respect, its the vote of Toronto city hall...
https://t.co/V7vOuYFF5P
— Sam Wollenberg (@samwollenberg)
January 18, 2021
"As many businesses and employers as possible should be offering sick leave protection to workers who need to go get tested, and who then in turn if they test positive need time off work,"
said Tory during a pandemic briefing last week.
"But those who don't have that through their employment are reluctant to get tested today, and in many cases are going to work sick, and in some cases are being encouraged to go to work sick, and thereby are spreading the virus."
Tory reiterated his support for paid sick days this afternoon after Ford's press conference, telling reporters that "this is an urgent issue that is causing people to go to work sick" and that "it is not right."
The mayor is
far from alone in his criticism of how both the federal and provincial governments have handled this issue so far, but Ford's comments on Monday afternoon struck many as particularly egregious.
"Actually, the Employment Standards Act is provincial legislation and 100 per cent your purview (as you should know, as you've deliberately eroded it since entering office),"
wrote the Toronto Drop-in Network on Twitter this afternoon in response to Ford's controversial comments.
"You're not 'jumping in'; you're performing your elected duty by legislating paid sick days."