Ontario is removing mandatory masking requirements for most settings on March 21st.
Masks will no longer be required in most indoor public settings, including schools.
Masks will still be required in select settings such as public transit, health care settings, long-term care homes and congregate care settings.
Today, Chief Medical Officer of Health, Dr. Kieran Moore, issued the following statement:
“With the peak of Omicron behind us, Ontario has been able to cautiously and gradually move through its reopening milestones.
The majority of public health and workplace safety measures have now been lifted, and key public health indicators continue to improve or remain stable.
As we continue on this path, we are able to take a more balanced and long-term approach to Ontario’s pandemic response.
As a society, we must remain kind, considerate and respectful toward those who continue wearing a mask. We must also expect indicators, such as cases and hospitalizations, to increase slightly as Ontarians increasingly interact with one another. However, thanks to our high vaccination rates and natural immunity, as well as the arrival of antivirals, Ontario has the tools necessary to manage the impact of the virus.
I want to thank Ontarians for their ongoing resilience and commitment to community as we navigated this global pandemic together. Your sacrifices and collective actions have made a difference.
While this does not signal that COVID-19 has disappeared or that the pandemic is over, it does mean that we have come to a place where we know what we need to do to manage this virus and to keep each other safe.
We need to remain vigilant. We need to stay home when sick. And, most importantly, we need to get vaccinated and boosted.
Vaccination is the best protection against COVID-19 and the best protection for the progress we have made.”
Learn how Ontario intends to lift the remaining public health and workplace safety measures here.