Here Are The Places You're Still Allowed To Go In Toronto Amid The Stay-At-Home Order

The city just released an official list of do's and don'ts.
Contributor

As of Thursday, Ontario's stay-at-home order officially came into effect, mandating everyone in the province to leave home only for essential reasons.

While the province has provided guidelines, Toronto has also published its own breakdown of dos and don'ts.

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These essential reasons can be grouped into several categories: food shopping, pharmacy trips, health care services, exercise, and essential work. 

However, according to the City of Toronto, there are a number of activities within these categories that you can still partake in.

You are encouraged to order take-out from your favourite restaurant, but you're not allowed to hang around outside and eat.

And while you're still allowed to go out shopping — even at St. Lawrence Market — you should go alone or with one other person if you need assistance.

However, visiting St. Lawrence Market "with a group or for tourism" is not permitted. 

Weddings, funerals, and religious services are permitted, but with a maximum of ten people, indoors or outdoors.

A limit of ten people also applies to mental health and substance use supports, which are allowed to continue.

While the Toronto Zoo, museums, and art exhibits are closed, the city encourages us to visit some of these attractions virtually.

If you're looking for something to do outside the four walls of your house, it might have to fall under the umbrella of exercise.

Toronto's outdoor amenities, such as skating and tobogganing hills, are open and welcoming visitors. Outdoor fitness equipment and off-leash dog parks are also permitted.

As far as in-person visits, you are allowed to check on vulnerable family, friends, and neighbours and help them with necessities.

  • Abby Neufeld was a writer at Narcity Canada. She received her Bachelor of Arts in English and Professional Communications at the University of Victoria. Her past work has been published in The Toronto Star, Bitch Media, Canadian Dimension, This Magazine, and more. In 2019, Abby co-founded The New Twenties, an environmentally-focused literary and arts magazine.

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