
Sask. NDP calls on province to 'take some action,' delay in-class learning amid Omicron spread
CBC
Saskatchewan's Opposition NDP is calling for a delay to in-class learning amid the spread of the Omicron variant.
Some students went back to school on Monday, while most others are set to return on Tuesday.
However, elsewhere across the country, in-class learning is on pause — including in Ontario, where it was announced Monday that students will learn remotely for the next two weeks.
Saskatchewan NDP leader Ryan Meili said that Ontario's move should prompt the Sask. Party government to reconsider its back-to-school timeline.
"We are calling on [Saskatchewan Premier] Scott Moe to take a page out of [Ontario Premier] Doug Ford's book — to take a page out of any premier's book — and take some action, instead of continuing to put his head in the sand," Meili said during a virtual news conference Monday afternoon.
In the provincial government's latest COVID-19 update, which was released last Friday, health officials posted a record 735 new cases. Of those, 117 were confirmed Omicron cases and another 1,355 were considered probable.
In response to the rising COVID-19 numbers, NDP education critic Carla Beck said she would like to see classes delayed by at least one week.
"We all want students to be in school, but hoping without a plan is going to land us in the same position we were in with the fourth wave — and I don't think that's something anyone wants," she said during Monday's news conference.
The NDP's hope is that an extra week would give the province time to come up with a new comprehensive back-to-school plan for school divisions to follow.
However, the Saskatchewan government said it has a plan in place that includes sending 250,000 rapid tests to schools across the province — on top of the disposable, medical-grade surgical masks already available in classrooms.
"These significant measures will support the continuation of in-class learning as we continue to learn with COVID-19 in our daily lives," the province said in an emailed statement to CBC News Monday afternoon.
"The Government of Saskatchewan believes it is important to resume in-class learning as normally and safely as possible, as it is important for children's health and development."
As students head back to in-class learning this week, major school divisions in Regina and Saskatoon are out with notes to families.
The Catholic divisions in both cities said there are no new COVID-19 measures in place this week; the only changes come from the province's new testing and isolation requirements. Those include not requiring a PCR test, should someone be positive for the virus through a rapid test, and only having to isolate for five days instead of 10, if asymptomatic and positive.

Health Minister Adriana LaGrange is alleging the former CEO of Alberta Health Services was unwilling and unable to implement the government's plan to break up the health authority, became "infatuated" with her internal investigation into private surgical contracts and made "incendiary and inaccurate allegations about political intrigue and impropriety" before she was fired in January.