The Reopening Ontario Act is an Act of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario that grants the Lieutenant Governor in Council the ability to continue "orders made under sections 7.0.2 and 7.1 of the Emergency Management and Civil Protection Act in relation to (the) COVID-19 (pandemic)".[1]

Reopening Ontario Act
Legislative Assembly of Ontario
  • Reopening Ontario (A Flexible Response to COVID-19) Act, 2020
CitationBill 195.
PassedJuly 21, 2020
Royal assentJuly 21, 2020
EffectiveJuly 21, 2020
Legislative history
Bill citationJones, Sylvia. Bill 195, Reopening Ontario (A Flexible Response to COVID-19) Act, 2020. Ontario Legislature. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |agency= ignored (help)
First readingJuly 7, 2020
Second readingJuly 14, 2020-July 21, 2020
Third readingJuly 21, 2020
Status: In force

History

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On the day the Bill came for third reading in the Legislature, Belinda Karahalios was removed from the Progressive Conservative caucus by Premier Doug Ford because she voted against it.[2][3]

The Ontario Nurses Association characterized the day as dark, and ONA President Vicki McKenna said that it "provides extensive powers to override collective agreements and take away the rights of our nurses and health-care professionals who have been working so hard to provide care during the pandemic... this bill enables... employers to deny or cancel vacation time, redeploy them to another unit or... facility at any time, and have far too much authority that is unchecked by the collective agreement."[4]

References

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