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Bring back masks, says B.C. rights watchdog

The decision to end mandate violates rights of those most at risk from COVID-19, Kasari Govender warns provincial health officer.
KasariGovenderBChumanrightscommisioner
Human rights commissioner Kasari Govender says the end to mask mandates unfairly puts vulnerable children and adults at risk.

British Columbia’s human rights watchdog wants public health officials to reinstate the provincial mask mandate to protect the most  vulnerable from severe COVID-19 outcomes.

The “hasty” end of the mask  mandate is placing elderly, disabled, immunocompromised and racialized  people, as well as children too young to be vaccinated, at elevated  risk, said human rights commissioner Kasari Govender.

“Lifting the mask mandate will do  disproportionate harm to those who are already marginalized, forcing  many to withdraw from activities of daily life in an effort to protect  their health, and reducing the capacity to enjoy their human right to  their full extent,” Govender wrote in a March 16 letter to provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry released Monday.

“While many of us have the good fortune to  simply move on with life, thousands of British Columbians will be left  behind because of their age, disability, or other protected  characteristic under B.C.’s Human Rights Code.”

The letter was written just days after Henry lifted the indoor mask mandate on March 11.

Henry cited high vaccine  coverage and declining hospitalizations as reasons the mask mandate  could be lifted in B.C. She also plans to lift the vaccine passport  requirements for restaurants and other public spaces on April 8.

Henry said the government wants to manage  the pandemic with the least restrictive means possible, but that masks  could be required once again if the situation changes. The last time the  provincial mask mandate was lifted, on July 1, 2021, it was reinstated  less than eight weeks later as the Delta variant exploded in the  province.

While B.C.’s initial Omicron wave has  faded, just under 300 patients remain in hospital with the virus,  including 48 in critical care. That number has begun to show early signs  of rising, and experts warn of a second Omicron wave fuelled by the now-dominant BA2 sub-variant and waning booster shot protection among those most at risk.

Since the mask mandate was lifted, 50 more people have died due to COVID-19, nearly three per day.

Govender said masks are at most a small  inconvenience for the public, and provide huge protection for those at  high risk of severe illness, long-term health impacts and death due to  COVID-19.

That includes seniors and immunocompromised  people of all ages, as well as Indigenous, racialized and low-income  people who are disproportionately impacted by chronic conditions and  employed in high-transmission sectors like manufacturing, retail,  service and hospitality. 

Govender also noted children five and under  attend school and daycare but are too young to be vaccinated right now.  Parents of vulnerable school-aged children, particularly those who are  high-risk themselves, must choose between keeping their families safe or  sending their kids to school, Govender noted.

“As an effective and minimally invasive  intervention, the mask mandate is justified long after other more  intrusive public health measures have been lifted,” wrote Govender.  “That people dislike wearing masks is not a compelling argument when  weighed against the rights of others to life, security of the person,  and equal participation in social and economic life.”

The Tyee reached out to Henry’s office for  comment and was directed to comments Health Minister Adrian Dix made in  Victoria today.

Dix said the decision to end the mask  mandate was made after careful consideration of the evidence, and that  concern for high-risk and vulnerable populations has been at the  forefront of the vaccination strategy and public health response.

“It is always a balance between the need  for measures in place, and the understanding of the impact they can have  on everyone in the community, including those who are uniquely  vulnerable,” he said to media at the legislature.

Dix added that while the mandate is over,  the province’s advice is still to wear a mask in public indoor spaces  and he does that himself.

BC Green Leader Sonia Furstenau also grilled Dix and Premier John Horgan about the concerns raised in the letter during today’s question period.

“In a pandemic, what does [your] government  owe to the people — and those who live with them — who are medically  vulnerable or immunocompromised?” she asked the premier.

Responding on Horgan’s behalf, Dix reiterated that the move was made with vulnerable people and scientific evidence in mind.

“I very much appreciate the letter from the  human rights commissioner,” Dix said. “Obviously, there’s some  disagreement there between one position and the other, but I can assure  her that the focus on the clinically vulnerable will continue to be the  principal focus of this government as we continue to deal with the  COVID-19 pandemic.”

Govender said leaving masking to individual choice puts the burden of the pandemic on those at the greatest risk.

“At this late stage in the pandemic, we  must not turn our backs on our mutual responsibility to keep each other  safe,” read her letter.

“There will be a day when the mask mandate may be lifted, but that day is not yet here.”