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Ontario announces fines for people reselling government-provided PPE and rapid tests

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The Ontario government will impose steep fines on those caught reselling free government-provided personal protective equipment as part of a broader package of legislation intended to help it “safely manage COVID-19 for the long-term.”

The updated regulations would make it illegal to resell, or ‘offer to resell,’ any government-provided PPE, including rapid antigen tests, masks, gloves, and hand sanitizer.

Fines will range from up to $20,000 for an individual offender or up to $250,000 per corporation, sources tell CP24.

The regulation is a part of broader package of legislation that the government is billing as its “plan to stay open.”

Other highlights, include a new $142 million grant that will eventually provide full tuition reimbursement to up to 2,500 nurses annually if they commit to work in an underserved Ontario community for at least two years following their graduation. The legislation will also make the wage bump given to Personal Care Support workers in October, 2020 permanent as part of a wider plan to address staffing issues in the long-term care sector.

“There were significant and long standing gaps in Ontario's health care and pandemic preparedness, gaps that should have never been allowed to leave so many vulnerable for so long. But I'm proud that our government has made considerable progress towards closing these long standing gaps,” Treasury Board President Prabmeet Singh Sarkaria said during a press conference on Tuesday to release details of the plan.

The government began cracking down on resellers of PPE in December last year as demand for COVID-19 rapid antigen tests soared amid rising cases fuelled by Omicron.

Rapid antigen tests were distributed in LCBO stores and malls during the holiday season as part of the province’s testing blitz.

Most of the locations would run out of tests even before the day ended.

After receiving complaints about rapid tests being sold online for exorbitant prices, Minister of Government and Community Services Ross Romano announced that the province would be working to “identify, track down, and fine” resellers.

The ministry said it has received more than 500 consumer complaints about the resell of rapid tests since mid-December.

A similar program where rapid antigen tests are distributed free to households through pharmacies is slated to end on or around April 8.

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