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Oakville Beaver, 23 Sep 2021, p. 24

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in si de ha lto n. co m O ak vi lle B ea ve r | T hu rs da y, S ep te m be r 23 ,2 02 1 | 24 Train your Apprentices at Mohawk mohawkcollege.ca/employers Build your future ready workforce. COVID-19 vaccine cer- tificates are now mandato- ry for Ontarians to enter a number of indoor spaces, the government of Ontario has shared details about how those certificates will work. Last week, Deputy Pre- mier Christine Elliott, As- sociate Minister of Digital Government Kaleed Rash- eed and chief medical offi- cer of health Dr. Kieran Moore provided informa- tion about screening guidelines for businesses, medical exemptions, en- forcement and penalties for anyone caught forging a certificate or otherwise failing to comply with the new requirements. Effective Sept. 22, On- tarians are required to pro- vide proof of vaccination to enter indoor settings, in- cluding restaurants, bars and entertainment, sports and recreation facilities. Unvaccinated patrons are still be able to access in- door areas in a few circum- stances, including to use a washroom, access an out- door area that is only ac- cessible via an indoor route, make a retail pur- chase, plan or pick up an order, pay for an order, purchase admission or, if it's necessary, for health and safety purposes. Elliott encouraged any- one who has received two doses of a Health Canada- approved vaccine to save or print a vaccine receipt from the provincial book- ing portal to use a proof of vaccination. Until Oct. 22, Ontarians can only enter settings where proof of vaccination is required using a vaccine receipt that shows full vac- cination, either printed or saved to their mobile de- vice, plus one piece of gov- ernment-issued identifica- tion that includes their name and date of birth. Someone is considered ful- ly vaccinated as of 14 days after receiving their sec- ond dose of an approved vaccine. Anyone with a medical exemption must show a written document, signed by a physician or registered nurse in the ex- tended class. On Oct. 22, the province will launch a digital certif- icate with a QR code and an app businesses can use to scan patrons' digital certif- icates and verify their vac- cination status. "We have chosen this ap- proach for two reasons," Rasheed said. "First, a QR code that is your enhanced vaccine certificate will make it easier, more secure and convenient to show you have been vaccinated when you need to, and sec- ond, our made-in-Ontario app will make it quicker and easier for businesses to confirm that a person's vaccine certificate is val- id." Digital QR code certifi- cates will automatically contain information about any relevant medical ex- emptions, and use of the certificates will be volun- tary. Anyone who wishes to continue using their original vaccine receipt can do so. Individuals and corpo- rations that fail to comply with the requirements could face fines of up to $750 and $1,000, respective- ly. They could also be pros- ecuted under the Provin- cial Offences Act and face fines of up to $100,000 and up to a year in jail for an in- dividual; up to $500,000 and up to a year in jail for an in- dividual who serves as a corporate director or offi- cer; and up to $10 million for a corporation. Compli- ance may be monitored and enforced by bylaw offi- cers. In addition to sharing details about Ontario's in- coming proof-of-vaccine requirements, the prov- ince also announced it will expand eligibility for third vaccine doses to certain populations with immune deficiencies, including people undergoing active treatment for solid tu- mours, people receiving chimeric antigen receptor transplants, people with severe or moderate prima- ry immune deficiencies, people receiving treatment for immune suppressive conditions and people with advanced HIV or AIDS. "Ontario is following the evidence when it comes to third doses of the CO- VID-19 vaccine, as well as following the recommen- dations from the National Advisory Committee on Immunization," Moore said. "A complete two-dose COVID-19 vaccine series provides strong protection against COVID-19 infec- tion, and severe outcomes ... However, for some popu- lations, a third dose may be required to provide suffi- cient protection because of a waning immune re- sponse to vaccines and in- creased risk of COVID-19 infection." ONTARIO REVEALS HOW VACCINE CERTIFICATES WILL WORK MEGAN DELAIRE mdelaire@toronto.com NEWS PEOPLE WHO DON'T COMPLY COULD FACE FINES OF UP TO $750 Get the Toronto Star weekend home delivery for just $399* AWEEK FOR12 MONTHS YOU'LL GET: • Saturday and Sunday home delivery • Starweek Magazine print edition • Complimentary 7-day ePaper edition • Complimentary 7-day access to thestar.com website *Plus HST. This introductory offer is not available to existing Toronto Star subscribers. Save 46% off the newsstand rate for Saturday and Sunday delivery. This offer includes Starweek Magazine. The New York Times International Weekly or Book Review sections are not included. This offer is for a 12-month term and includes complimentary access to thestar.com and the Toronto Star ePaper edition. Complimentary access is available to Toronto Star home-delivery subscribers with an active account in good standing. If you choose to cancel your print account, or your subscription is in arrears, your access to thestar.com and the ePaper edition will be discontinued. The Toronto Star reserves the right to discontinue this offer at any time. Toronto Star delivery will continue after the 12-month introductory period at the regular home-delivery rate then in effect. This offer is a fixed subscription term. If you cancel prior to the end of the term, you will be charged an early cancellation fee equal to amounts otherwise payable for the remainder of the term, plus applicable taxes. The cancellation fee will be charged using the billing method we have on file at the time of cancellation. Please contact customer service at 416-367-4500 to get the regular rate for your area. Payment must be made by credit card only. Credit card payments will be billed monthly. View our subscriber agreement terms at www.thestar.com/ agreement. Toronto Star is committed to protecting your personal information. View our privacy policy at www.thestar.com/privacy. Offer expires October 13, 2021. SAVE 46 % OFFTHE NEWSSTAND RATE SUBSCRIBE ONLINE: tsoffers.ca/deal/comm OR CALL: 416-367-4500 and quote code 2DAYSAVE for weekend home delivery for 12 months WEATHER HIGH 28 C | THUNDERSTORM |MAP A27 SATURDAY, AUGUST 7, 2021 GOLDRUSH It was a euphoric end to a story years in the making: Christine Sinclair and the team she inspired came through a gruelling final against Sweden to take Ol old, and Canada of the orld Teammates rush to celebrate after Julia Grosso's penalty kick sealed Canada's win in the gold-medal match against Sweden on Friday in Yokohama. RICK MADONIK TORONTO STAR 'We fought through the whole tournament, we fought tonight and managed to find a way to win' -- CHRISTINE SINCLAIR

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