City golf courses, playgrounds to open; libraries to remain closed
City playgrounds, golf courses and sports fields are set to open up Monday, though libraries won’t unlock their doors just yet.
Mayor Brian Bowman urged Winnipeggers to be patient as the city responds to provincial rules that will allow a variety of facilities to reopen Monday, after the sites closed to reduce the risk of contracting COVID-19.
Mayor Brian Bowman urged Winnipeggers to be patient.
“We’re considering how to implement this rapid reopening under very short time frames, while weighing the health and safety or our staff and our residents."
— Winnipeg Mayor Brian Bowmn
Bowman said the city learned about the province’s reopening plan as it was released to the public on Wednesday.
"We’re considering how to implement this rapid reopening under very short time frames, while weighing the health and safety or our staff and our residents," he said.
All city-owned play structures and picnic shelters will reopen Monday, along with skate parks, tennis courts, basketball courts, and athletic fields. People must abide by physical distancing rules and gatherings must be limited to 10 people. Only non-contact sports will be allowed.
The Kildonan Park, Crescent Drive, and Harbour View golf courses will also open, while the Windsor Park golf course will remain closed due to high water levels on the Seine River.
City libraries will remain closed, however, as the city determines how to handle sites full of high-touch objects, including books.
"I don’t know if I can define a more high-touch area. Libraries, in (their) essence, are places that we have to be touching books, moving things. We want to make sure that we have an appropriate, safe plan for our staff and our patrons," said Jason Shaw, Winnipeg’s assistant chief of emergency management.
Winnipeg Centennial Library, above, along with all other city libraries will remain closed while the city determines how to handle sites full of high-touch objects, including books.
Shaw stressed that people who flock to sites on Monday must follow physical distancing rules and gathering limits, which he expects parents will help enforce at playgrounds.
"Parents will be out with their kids and parents are going to be doing what they’ve always done. They’ll be watching their children, they’ll be washing their hands before and after," he said.
All city-owned play structures and picnic shelters will reopen Monday.
To assist restaurants, Bowman said the city will conduct a fast-tracked registration process for new temporary patios, since the province will allow patio restaurants, but not indoor dining, as of Monday.
Restaurant owners can apply for that clearance on the city’s website as of Friday. The city will try to confirm as many approvals as possible by Monday, Bowman said.
The temporary patios could last until May 31, when the city will re-evaluate them.
Meanwhile, a planned Winnipeg Transit service cut will take place as planned on Monday, despite the fact citizens will suddenly have more places to go that same day.
The Amalgamated Transit Union Local 1505, which represents bus drivers, has lobbied the city to cancel the switch to an enhanced Saturday schedule on weekdays, as well as 253 driver layoffs.
Maintenance workers rake the sand traps at Kildonan Park Golf Course, one of several city-owned courses slated to open Monday.
"We need the service to have the capacity to provide the needed buses for the influx of the public that will be taking transit and will be going out to the malls and those services that will be open on Monday," said union president Romeo Ignacio.
From the Journal Winninpeg Free Press

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