Summary
The Emergency Management and Civil Protection
Act (the "Act") gives the
provincial government broad-ranging powers to act in the public
interest by declaring a state of emergency.
The current version of the Act was developed following a review of
Ontario's response to the March 2003 SARS outbreak and the
August 2003 power outage, which revealed deficiencies in
Ontario's ability to respond to emergency situations.
Yesterday, in response to the spread of COVID-19, the Government of
Ontario declared a State of Emergency under the Act.
By declaring a State of Emergency, the Act gives the provincial
cabinet the ability to make orders in respect of:
- Implementing any emergency plans formulated under section municipalities or the province;
- Regulating or prohibiting travel or movement to, from or within any specified area;
- Evacuating individuals and animals and removing personal property from any specified area and making arrangements for the adequate care and protection of individuals and property;
- Establishing facilities for the care, welfare, safety and shelter of individuals, including emergency shelters and hospitals;
- Closing any place, whether public or private, including any business, office, school, hospital or other establishment or institution;
- To prevent, respond to or alleviate the effects of the emergency, constructing works, restoring necessary facilities and appropriating, using, destroying, removing or disposing of property;
- Collecting, transporting, storing, processing and disposing of any type of waste;
- Authorizing facilities, including electrical generating facilities, to operate as is necessary to respond to or alleviate the effects of the emergency;
- Using any necessary goods, services and resources within any part of Ontario, distributing, and making available necessary goods, services and resources and establishing centres for their distribution;
- Procuring necessary goods, services and resources;
- Fixing prices for necessary goods, services and resources and prohibiting charging unconscionable prices in respect of necessary goods, services and resources;
- Authorizing, but not requiring, any person, or any person of a class of persons, to render services of a type that that person, or a person of that class, is reasonably qualified to provide;
- Subject to certain protections, requiring that any person collect, use or disclose information that in the opinion of the Lieutenant Governor in Council may be necessary in order to prevent, respond to or alleviate the effects of the emergency; and
- Consistent with the order-making powers listed above, taking such other actions or implementing such other measures as the Lieutenant Governor in Council considers necessary in order to prevent, respond to or alleviate the effects of the emergency.
The orders are temporary and are to be exercised in a manner
that limits their intrusiveness. Notably, if an order made under
the Act conflicts with any statute, regulation, rule, by-law, other
order or instrument of a legislative nature, including a licence or
approval, the emergency order made under the Act prevails.
To date, Ontario has only issued two Orders under the Act:
- an Order closing bars and restaurants (except for providing takeout or delivery), public libraries, all facilities providing indoor recreational programs, private schools (as defined in the Education Act), licensed child care centres, concert venues, and other similar venues where people typically gather, and
- an Order prohibiting public events of over 50 people, including parades and events and communal services within places of worship.
Notwithstanding the issuance of these Orders, the Ontario
government confirmed all essential services remain available, such
as grocery stores, convenience stores, pharmacies, manufacturing
facilities, and public transit.
The content of this article does not constitute legal advice and should not be relied on in that way. Specific advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.