Southern discomfort poses early test for new premier, as COVID cases in Manitoba region mount
CBC
When Heather Stefanson campaigned to become Manitoba's premier, she told Progressive Conservative Party members that she was the only contender with enough experience in this government to dive straight into the job.
For better or for worse, she has the chance to prove that immediately.
There is no shortage of challenges facing the new premier, from an economic recovery threatened by a labour shortage to a University of Manitoba strike to a coming winter where the province's rivers may not have enough water to make any money off electricity exports.
And the pandemic has stormed back in Southern Health to the point where the COVID-19 infection rate is near the third-wave peak in that region — while the rest of Manitoba is either containing the fourth wave or never really had one.
There is no nice way to say it: COVID cases are spreading so quickly in Southern Health, the entire province could pay the price in weeks if the rate of growth is not somehow controlled.
The numbers speak for themselves. Southern Health, which has 15 per cent of Manitoba's population, was responsible for 34 per cent of the active COVID-19 cases in the province as of Friday.
People from Southern Health make up 42 per cent of COVID-19 patients in hospital and 58 per cent of the patients in intensive care.
Six out of the nine most recent COVID-19 deaths disclosed by the province were Southern Health residents.
Community spread is also the highest in the region. The five-day test positivity rate in Southern Health reported Friday was 14.5 per cent — more than seven times Winnipeg's.
Thanks primarily to Southern Health, Manitoba's running average daily number of COVID cases is growing by about 16 per cent a week. The average daily case count now stands at 126 — up from 89 two weeks earlier — and more COVID-19 patients are now being admitted to Manitoba hospitals than leaving them.
The prospect of yet another hospital crunch is enough for some Winnipeggers to call on leaders to build a wall around the city's southern flank and make Steinbach or Winkler pay for it. But that's not practical, even as a rhetorical statement.
Southern Manitoba as a whole, including Winnipeg, is too interconnected to keep people apart.
The disparate pandemic situation demands a more subtle policy response.
On Wednesday, the province's deputy chief public health officer said education must play a role in convincing more Southern Health residents to adhere to public health measures, or even decide to get the COVID vaccine shots.