Outdoor tour and guide services with capacity limits.Horse racing and motor speedways for spectators with capacity limits. Outdoor cinemas and performing arts with capacity limits.Personal care services where face coverings can be worn at all times with capacity limits.Non-essential retail at 25 per cent capacity essential retail at 50 per cent capacity.Outdoor meeting and event spaces with capacity limits.Outdoor dining up to 6 people per table.Indoor gatherings up to 5 people and other restrictions.Step Two: 70 per cent of adults have received one dose and 20 per cent of adults have had two Campsites, campgrounds and short-term rentals and.Outdoor zoos, landmarks, historic sites and botanical gardens with capacity limits.Outdoor pools, splash pads and wading pools with capacity limited to permit 2 metres of physical distancing.Horse racing and motor speedways without spectators.Outdoor religious services, rites and ceremonies with capacity limited to permit 2 metres of physical distancing.Retail stores in malls closed unless the stores have a street-facing entrance.Non-essential retail at 15 per cent capacity.Essential retail at 25 per cent capacity and can sell all goods (including discount and big box).Outdoor fitness classes, personal training and sports training up to 10 people.Outdoor dining up to 4 people per table.Step One: 60 per cent of Ontario adults have received at least one dose Here's everything you need to know about what the new 3-step reopening entails, and what the people of Ontario need to do to move through it swiftly. Health Minister Christine Elliott said on Thursday when announcing the news that, based on current trends in key health indicators, Ontario is expected to enter Step One of the reopening roadmap the week of June 14, 2021. We're all in this together - and everything depends on how fast Ontario residents get vaccinated against COVID-19. This time around, restrictions will not be lifted on a region-by-region basis. Stay-at-home orders are still expected to lift on June 2, as planned, but current emergency brake shutdown restrictions will remain in effect until we're cleared to enter Step One of the Roadmap. The new plan involves three distinct steps - not to be confused with the "stages" of Ontario's original reopening framework, as implemented last summer, or the colour-coded "zones" of the framework we were under before the entire province was plunged back into full shutdown mode on April 3. Ontario's provincial government just released a 3-step plan they've dubbed " Roadmap to Reopening" outlining how they plan to lift lockdown restrictions across the province over the weeks and months to come.
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