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These Ontario parents want province to make masks mandatory in classrooms again
CBC
Heather Hanwell wants to see a mask mandate reinstated in Ontario schools and she knows that's not a popular opinion.
But the mother from York Region says she doesn't believe air filtration and ventilation in classrooms have gone far enough to keep students and staff safe.
"This is absolutely not a popular stance and the thing is, it's not about a popularity contest," Hanwell told Rebecca Zandbergen, host of CBC Radio's London Morning.
"Politicians right now are the ones that are making these decisions and they are the ones that are concerned about popularity, not about public health."
Hanwell and other parents have formed the group Ontario School Safety, which has about 20 dedicated volunteers but more than 400 people who have supported the cause through financial donations. She says they're considering legal action against the province to see masks return to schools. They'd also like to see other measures return, like better access to rapid test kits and reporting on cases in schools.
WATCH | Respiratory illness surge revives debate over masking indoors:
This comes as Critical Care Services Ontario reported 122 children were in in pediatric ICUs across the province. Ontario has a total of 112 intensive care beds for children.
Dr. Lennox Huang, an intensive care physician and the chief medical officer at Toronto's Hospital for Sick Children, told CBC Toronto hospitals have reached "a point of crisis for pediatric care across the province."
"All of our predictions ... would indicate that things are going to get worse before they're better," Huang said.
Hanwell says the group understands there are many people who are angry and parents want their children to have a "normal" school year. She says that's what her group wants, too.
"We get it, we understand why maybe you've stopped masking, we understand the pressures to want to get back to what we call normal," she said. "We want Ontario open for business, open for learning."
Hanwell said with layered protections such as masking, ventilation and hand washing, "that we can keep things open, that we can continue with our activities and keep our kids in their sports and their clubs and keep them in school where they need to be. Everyone agrees — kids are best in school."
Kate Laing is a mother in Waterloo region and has heard people argue that she can just send her own children to school with masks. She did that and she says her son came home with COVID-19 within days of starting school in September.
"Vaccines are part of it, but they're not a silver bullet. Masking is one of those layers that we know really decreases the spread of airborne viruses," Laing told Craig Norris, host of CBC Kitchener-Waterloo's The Morning Edition.