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Ontario movie theatre regulations put sector one step forward, a hundred steps back

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  • Ontario movie theatre regulations put sector one step forward, a hundred steps back

    https://www.theglobeandmail.com/arts...ctor-one-step/

    It was a case of good news, bad news this week for Ontario moviegoers and
    movie theatre owners.

    On Tuesday, Queen’s Park unveiled its [84]Keeping Ontario Safe and Open
    Framework, a five-tiered colour-coded system designed to ease COVID-19
    restrictions on businesses that were affected by last month’s modified
    “Stage 2” measures. It was a welcome development for audiences desperate
    to get out of the house, as theatres have been shuttered in the “hot
    spots” of Toronto, Ottawa, York and Peel regions for the past month. This
    despite the fact there have been no reported cases of COVID-19
    transmission in theatres not only in Canada, but across the globe.

    “Evidence strongly suggests that the moviegoing experience is safer than
    other activities such as indoor dining or attending religious services,”
    the Global Cinema Federation, which represents more than 100 exhibitors in
    90 countries, [85]said last month. “There are no reported cases associated
    with cinemas, despite the fact that cinemas in countries like Korea, Japan
    and Sweden remained open for most of the initial period of the pandemic
    and the additional fact that in different countries and in different parts
    of the United States, cinemas have been open for three to four months
    since lockdowns were lifted.”

    Yet while Ontario theatres can now reopen if their regional public-health
    units fall under all but the most severe of “red-control” and
    “grey-lockdown” tiers, cinemas operating in “orange-restricted” regions –
    which currently include Toronto, Ottawa, Peel, York and parts of Eastern
    Ontario – can only play hos to 50 guests a building. That allowance is far
    fewer than the 50 guests for every auditorium limit under the framework’s
    “green-prevent” and “yellow-protect” tiers, as well as the modified Stage
    3 restrictions that the province’s cinemas were complying with in
    [88]August and September.

    “The criteria for ‘orange-restrict’ that limits cinemas to 50 per building
    is just a shutdown by another name. The government is aware that a ’50 per
    building' capacity limit is not economically viable,” the [89]Movie
    Theatre Association of Canada said in a statement this week. “Cinemas have
    faithfully operated under the approved plan and they have delivered –
    there have been zero outbreaks linked to cinemas in Ontario. None. Indeed,
    as best we can tell there have been zero requests for contact tracing data
    from any movie theatre in the province.”

    On Wednesday, Landmark Cinemas, the country’s second-largest exhibitor
    after Cineplex, announced that it was “simply uneconomic” to open under
    Ontario’s orange-restrict conditions, and would keep some of its
    multiplexes – in Caledon, Orleans and Kanata – closed.

    “I would have a different view if we were mired in contact tracing, but
    we’re not,” Landmark chief executive officer Bill Walker says. “It doesn’t
    make sense and it’s incongruent with reality to impose restrictions on
    businesses that are operating without even the suspicion of an incident.
    ... Closing venues that have demonstrated the ability to operate safely
    will only encourage people to gather in venues where the province has less
    or no control over mandated health measures."

    On Thursday, Cineplex followed suit, keeping 28 of its 68 Ontario theatres
    closed.


    Ontario’s new framework comes a month after Lisa MacLeod, the province’s
    Minister of Heritage, Sport, Tourism and Culture, participated in a
    [92]“socially distanced, rigorously sanitized and fully masked movie
    experience” at a Toronto Cineplex location, where she praised theatre
    operators for delivering a safe customer experience. The minister was not
    available for comment this week.

    While exhibitors face myriad pandemic-era challenges, including a dearth
    of fresh programming – this weekend’s biggest new release slate is the
    Kevin Costner/Diane Lane thriller [93]Let Him Go, a respectable offering,
    but not exactly a blockbuster – there is no hope of recovery if only a
    trickle of guests are allowed through the door.

    “I’m optimistic and I think logic will prevail,” Landmark’s Walker says.
    “But we’ve had six-plus months of this. We can’t be changing our minds all
    the time.”

  • #2
    Really...he's optimistic and thinks logic will prevail? Has he been asleep for the last 10 months? Then again, he's in Canada where they still can have that optimism. Bet he'd feel differently if he lived down here.

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