COVID-19 response remains large part of 2022 Ottawa Public Health budget

Spending on the COVID-19 response remains a significant part of Ottawa's health budget in 2022, even as vaccination coverage approaches 90 per cent.
Ottawa Public Health's 2022 draft budget was tabled at Monday's Board of Health meeting. It projects a balanced budget of $123 million next year, including $41.5 million on COVID-19 measures.
Speaking to reporters following the meeting, Medical Officer of Health Dr. Vera Etches said there is still a lot of work that will go into the COVID-19 response in the new year and beyond.
"It takes case and contact management to keep things under control. All of the outbreak prevention work to reinforce infection prevention control measures in many kinds of settings continues," she explained. "The school support work will continue. Today and in the new year we expect to have the highest rates among five to 11-year-olds and that requires a lot of effort to limit transmission. And with changing pandemic needs, there's a lot of ongoing need to communicate what is needed and what the rules are."
Etches said she anticipates some COVID-19 work could continue into 2023, but she also noted that the budget includes a plan to gradually de-escalate the COVID-19 response in 2022.
"The 2022 plan is to maintain the current response level until the end of April. In May, a gradual process of de-escalation of the pandemic response is expected to be initiated and a reduction of the additional resources down to 75 per cent of existing levels. A further reduction of the response is expected in July to approximately 50 per cent of existing levels and then again in the last quarter of 2022 – down to 30 per cent," a report prepared for the Board of Health says.
The budget currently does not include associated costs with COVID-19 vaccine booster shots. Staff say a full costing to administer booster vaccines will be provided to the Board of Health if and when they are identified in provincial plans.
While the budget COVID-19 response is high, it is roughly $5 million less than the spending in 2021 to fight the pandemic.
The budget also includes $47.7 million in one-time expenditures on COVID-19.
"The remaining addition of $47.7 million is the one-time request related to COVID-19 and OPH’s need to maintain the fall 2021 response level through the winter, before decreasing the intensity of the response over the year," the staff report says.
Staff say the Ministry of Health has told Ontario's health units that there will be a process to request reimbursement of 2021 COVID-19 extraordinary costs.
"Thus it is anticipated that Provincial funding will fully offset all pandemic related costs therefore balancing the budget," staff said.
In addition to COVID-19 expenses, the budget includes $22.3 million for core programs at OPH, such as dental health, mental health, and school immunizations (non-COVID), which the health unit began to restore in the summer and fall after many staff were shifted to the COVID-19 response. $2.7 million is included for the Ontario Seniors Dental Care Program and $4.5 million is budgeted for the Healthy Babies Healthy Children program.
The 2022 draft budget report will be presented to city council on Wednesday. The board will consider the budget for approval at its subsequent meeting on Nov. 29 before the full budget is tabled at city council on Dec. 8.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
BREAKING | Two people dead following severe Ontario thunderstorm
Two people were struck and killed by falling trees during a severe thunderstorm that hit most of southern Ontario Saturday afternoon.

Putin's invasion of Ukraine an 'act of madness,' former U.K. PM Blair says
The United Kingdom's former prime minister Tony Blair says Russian President Vladimir Putin's decision to invade Ukraine is an 'act of madness.' In an interview on CTV's Question Period airing Sunday, Blair said Putin doesn't appear to be the same man he knew in the early 2000s.
Flu cases on the rise in Canada despite expected fall
The federal government is reporting a sharp rise in influenza in recent months, at a time of the year when detected cases generally start to fall in Canada.
BREAKING | Toronto investigating first suspected case of monkeypox
Health officials in Toronto say they are investigating the first suspected case of monkeypox in the city.
Thunderstorms kill 2 in southern Ont., knock out power in parts of Que.
As the May long weekend kicked off, a massive thunderstorm in southern Ontario and Quebec brought strong wind gusts that knocked down trees, took out power and left at least two people dead.
Youngest of 10 Buffalo shooting victims laid to rest
Roberta Drury, a 32-year-old woman who was the youngest of the 10 Black people killed at a Buffalo supermarket, was remembered at her funeral Saturday for her love for family and friends, tenacity 'and most of all, that smile that could light up a room.'
The science behind why smoke seems to follow you around a campfire
Why does smoke seem to follow you around a campfire? B.C. research scientist Kerry Anderson told CTVNews.ca the answer actually boils down to physics.
Expert's tips on what to do if you're being carjacked amid rash of Toronto incidents
Some drivers in Toronto may be feeling on edge as Toronto is dealing with a rash of violent carjackings targeting mostly high-end vehicles.
A year of trauma, catharsis and finally peace for some survivors of Kamloops school
The nightmares started last May, said Harvey McLeod, chief of the Upper Nicola Indian Band and a survivor of the former Kamloops Indian Residential School.