Despite early closure, Whistler a COVID-19 hot spot for P.1 variant
Posted April 7, 2021 1:24 pm.
Last Updated April 7, 2021 1:25 pm.
WHISTLER (NEWS 1130) – Close to 200 cases of the P.1 variant, first identified in Brazil, have been linked to Whistler.
Provincial Health Officer Dr. Bonnie Henry confirmed on Tuesday that numerous efforts were made since January to try to contain COVID-19 clusters at the resort — which was allowed to stay open during Spring Break.
“Whistler has had about three increases — waves, if you will — since January where we’ve had quite a lot of transmission, and again in social connections and people who are living in group accommodation there,” she said, adding the resort had at least 197 cases of the P.1 variant.
“We think that this peaked about the week of March 22nd. Most of the cases have been identified, and through the good work of our public health teams around the province, and we’re stopping those chains of transmission,” Henry said.
Re: Why wasn’t #Whistler shut down when evidence there of #Brazil variant BEFORE #SpringBreak, she suggests drastic measures were taken when case numbers exploded.
She’s not confirming #SpringBreak party at #Whistler is cause of clusters at 3 #Vancouver private schools. #bced— Marcella Bernardo (@Bernardo1130) April 6, 2021
Whistler Blackcomb was forced to shut down until at least April 19 as part of measures announced on March 29.
On Tuesday, Henry announced B.C. had recorded a total of 877 cases of the P.1 variant — with more than 22 per cent of cases linked to the popular ski resort.
It’s believed the mutation made its way there through visitors from other parts of Canada, she explained.
“But then it started to circulated in some of the chains of transmission in Whistler as well between workers, visitors, and from there spread to other parts of the province,” Henry said.
Related article:
-
B.C. again records more than 1,000 COVID cases
-
Questions loom over B.C.’s variant numbers as COVID-19 cases continue to spike
Henry warned in late March that transmission related to travel to and from Whistler and other communities posed a real concern for spread. This is despite increased testing, contact tracing, vaccinations, and other measures taken by Vancouver Coastal and the community.
B.C. has recorded more than 3,700 confirmed variant cases to date.