Quebec restaurant dining rooms can reopen at half capacity on Monday
Quebec will allow small gatherings and restaurants can open at half capacity as of Monday as COVID-19 restrictions begin to ease.
Premier Francois Legault said Tuesday that the new loosening of measures still comes with some restrictions: a maximum of four people or two bubbles will be permitted to dine together, so long as they have proof of vaccination.
Bars and casinos are to remain closed for the moment.
Legault announced that extra-curricular sports will also be permitted (maximum 25 people), but only for those 18 years old and under.
The rule applies to practices only. No games are allowed.
"We are all aware that a lot of Quebecers are fed up, they're fed up with the restrictions," Legault said. "It's been 22 months. I understand that there are a lot of Quebecers for whom it's starting to affect their mental health."
Ski chalets are also allowed to open at half capacity.
In addition, there will be a maximum of two visitors allowed at the provinces' private long-term care homes (CHSLDs), so long as the people visit one at a time, and at public care homes, the maximum is four, but only two at a time.
On Feb. 7, venues, cinemas and arenas will be allowed to reopen at 50 per cent capacity with a maximum of 500 people.
Places of worship will also be permitted to reopen at half capacity with a 250-person maximum with a mandatory vaccine passport requirement.
Funeral homes can welcome as many as 50 people.
Gyms, spas and sports for adults will remain closed.
Legault spoke alongside Health Minister Christian Dube and acting director of public health Dr. Luc Boileau as he provided the update.
Dining rooms have been closed since the end of December in an effort to curb surging COVID-19 cases. It is expected that they will be allowed to open with limited capacity.
Some restaurant and bar owners have been considering reopening in protest at the end of the month, while police in Jonquiere, Que., in the Saguenay-Lac-St-Jean region, were called last week to a bakery that had reopened its dining room.
At least one Montreal-area restaurant owner is no longer willing to wait for the official green light.
Humza Chaudhry, co-owner of breakfast and lunch restaurant Baba & Zazu in the Mount Royal neighbourhood, said he reopened his dining room a few days ago and no longer worries about the consequences.
"Enough is enough. We're done with it," he said Tuesday in a phone interview. "Everything is open, if we don't open we'll go underwater."
Chaudhry says he's opening his dining room to full capacity. He said that even if an official reopening is coming, he needed time to train his kitchen and floor staff and prepare them both physically and mentally for a return to work.
"It's not like a switch that turns on and off," he said.
The response from customers, he said, has been positive. "They feel like they're getting out of prison."
Other business owners said Tuesday they're understanding of the public health needs, but they're exhausted of the struggle to keep their businesses afloat and going through the "yo-yo" cycle of opening and closing.
"I’m glad my extended Christmas vacation is over…I’m going to open on the eighth, I’m going to play Spider-Man, Matrix, all those movies people couldn’t see," said Vincent Guzzo, president of Cinemas Guzzo.
"Hopefully, we’re done. In other words, I don’t want to hear of another theatre closure ever again."
Jean-Jacques Beauchamp, the president of the Quebec bar association, said it's "a little disappointing" that bars aren't yet included but "our time will come, obviously… it’s a matter of days or weeks."
However, in total, being closed for 17 out of 22 months is no joke, he said, and what bar owners really need is not just to get the green light to reopen, but "to reopen and stay open for a long while."
Gym owners and others voiced similar feelings of burnout.
The announcement on Tuesday is a week to the day since schools reopened in the province as part of the government's deconfinement plan.
The province is still lacking 12,000 health-care workers and the health-care network in the province needs to be rebuilt, the premier said.
"Our health network needs, and an overhaul, and the overhaul must be built around people who work in the health network," said Legault.
Quebec's Health Ministry reported Tuesday that there are 3,278 COVID-19 patients in Quebec hospitals, including 263 in intensive care wards. A week ago, there were 3,417 patients, with 289 in ICUs.
-- with files from Morgan Lowrie of The Canadian Press.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Police inaction allowed Texas massacre to continue with catastrophic consequences: experts
The decision by police to wait before confronting the gunman at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde was a failure with catastrophic consequences, experts say. When it was all over 19 students and two teachers were dead.

Indigenous B.C. filmmaker says he was refused entry on Cannes red carpet for his moccasins
A Dene filmmaker based in Vancouver says he was "disappointed" and "close to tears" when security at the Cannes Film Festival blocked him from walking the red carpet while dressed in a pair of moccasins.
'Absurd' to criticize feds for possible challenge of provincial laws, says Lametti
Justice Minister David Lametti is defending the federal government's authority to challenge provincial laws that they believe infringe on the rights of Canadians, after Quebec said Ottawa's reaction to Bills 21 and 96 lacked 'respect.'
Putin warns against continued arming of Ukraine; Kremlin claims another city captured
As Russia asserted progress in its goal of seizing the entirety of contested eastern Ukraine, President Vladimir Putin tried Saturday to shake European resolve to punish his country with sanctions and to keep supplying weapons that have supported Ukraine's defence.
'What happened to Chelsea?' Vancouver march demands answers in Indigenous woman's death
Around a hundred people gathered at noon Saturday at the empty Vancouver home where Chelsea Poorman’s remains were found late last month to show their support for her family's call for answers and justice.
Canada to play for gold at men's hockey worlds after victory over Czechia
Canada and Finland won semifinal games Saturday to set up a third straight gold-medal showdown between the teams at the IIHF world hockey championship.
Tear gas fired at Liverpool fans in Champions League final policing chaos
Riot police fired tear gas and pepper spray at Liverpool supporters forced to endure lengthy waits to get into the Champions League final amid logistical chaos and an attempt by UEFA and French authorities to blame overcrowding at turnstiles on people trying to access the stadium with fake tickets on Saturday.
48K without power one week after deadly storm swept through Ontario, Quebec
One week after a severe wind and thunderstorm swept through Ontario and Quebec, just over 48,000 homes in the two provinces were still without power on Saturday.
Explainer: Where do hydro poles come from?
The devastating storm in southern Ontario and Quebec last weekend damaged thousands of hydro poles across the two provinces. CTVNews.ca gives a rundown of where utility companies get their hydro poles from, as well as the climate challenges in the grid infrastructure.