The Alberta government is moving to try to prohibit any COVID-19 mask mandates in schools, Premier Danielle Smith said Saturday morning.
In a statement sent to news media Saturday, Smith alleged that the mental health, development and education of students, from kindergarten to Grade 12, have suffered because of wearing masks in class.
“We must turn the page on what has been an extremely difficult time for children, along with their parents and teachers,” Smith said.
On Thursday, Court of King’s Bench Justice Grant Dunlop ruled that the order to lift school mask mandates last February was “unreasonable,” because it was based on an interpretation of the province’s Public Health Act that gave politicians final say on public health orders.
On Saturday, the premier said she has directed Justice Minister Tyler Shandro to examine whether an appeal of the decision would be appropriate.
An appeal is unlikely, though, said Lorian Hardcastle,┬аa University of Calgary assistant law professor with a joint appointment to the┬аdepartment of community health sciences.
Appealing the decision would put the government back in court and reopens the argument that lifting mask mandates┬аinfringes┬аon charter rights of immunocompromised children, she explained. But┬аthere are also other mechanisms the government┬аcan use instead to achieve Smith’s goal, namely regulation.
The premier said Saturday that she has instructed Shandro, Health Minister Jason Copping and Education Minister Adriana LaGrange to alert her of any legislative or regulatory changes that would be required to “reaffirm or clarify our government’s full authority” on health and education matters.
If the Alberta government chooses to push┬аforward, it will likely regulate the ability of schools to implement mask mandates through┬аthe Education Act, Hardcastle said.
“The judge was quite clear that the government’s previous practice of dictating to the chief medical officer of health what goes into her orders is not a legal one, so I think that they won’t go that route,” she said.
The government may also do nothing, opting instead to wait and┬аsee if schools bring mask mandates┬аback on their own, she added.
Hardcastle said Smith’s statement┬аis another example of┬аpoliticizing COVID-19 and, in this case, stating something about the effect of masking on students that may┬аnot be based on fact.
“If she is going to make assertions that are unbalanced… she needs to present the evidence that she’s relying on, so that those who do have expertise in this area can┬аcritique it and weigh in,” she said.
“I just don’t think that evidence is there.”
‘Dictatorial approach’
COVID-19 is still┬аpresent across Alberta.
The province’s seven-day PCR test positivity rate was 18.36 per cent as of Oct. 24, provincial date shows. There were 1,118 people in hospital with the illness, including 28 patients in intensive care units.
Data also suggests, however, that COVID-19 is spreading more in some regions than in others.
As of Oct. 24, the seven-day PCR test positivity rate in the Alberta Health Services┬аsouth zone was over 28 per cent, but only┬аabout 15 per cent in the Edmonton zone.
Smith’s statement suggests she is taking a more “top-down, dictatorial approach” to public health, which would deny local entities to act according to their respective situation, Hardcastle said.
“Public health is massively broad and complex and multidimensional, and everyone needs to have their own appropriate rules and precautions in place,” Hardcastle said.
“In some cases, a local entity is in a better position to decide what’s appropriate than the provincial government passing a┬аrule that applies to the whole province.”
Regardless,┬аAlberta’s school boards must adhere to whatever the government decides, said Cathy Hogg, president of the Public School Boards Association of Alberta.
“We are governed by Alberta legislation and our minister of education, so we have to do as we’re told, whether we agree or don’t agree,” said Hogg, who is also the chair of Prairie Rose Public Schools, which serves 23 schools in southeastern Alberta.
“Our kids are a priority and that’ll always be our priority, so we’ll just do our best.”
In┬аPrairie Rose schools, there are other measures┬аin place to help prevent the potential spread of COVID-19, said division┬аsuperintendent Reagen Weeks. She┬аlisted┬аenhanced cleaning protocols and┬аair filtration devices тАФ┬аinstalled in some classrooms┬атАФ┬аas examples.
Parents, however,┬аcan insist that their children wear masks in class, and school staff will do what they┬аcan to ensure a respectful environment, Hogg┬аsaid.