Everything you need to know about COVID-19 in Alberta on Monday, March 1
The province will begin moving on to Step 2 of its plan to lift restrictions. It will allow limited use of libraries and gyms, but it will hold off on easing restrictions further on retail businesses, hotels, banquet halls and children's sports.
Province announces Alberta will begin moving on to Step 2 of plan to lift restrictions

The latest:
- Alberta Premier Jason Kenney, Health Minister Tyler Shandro and Dr. Deena Hinshaw announced Monday the province would begin moving on to Step 2 of its plan to lift restrictions.
- Libraries will now be able to open to 15 per cent of fire code capacity.
- Low-intensity individual and group fitness activities, such as low-intensity yoga, Pilates and tai-chi, will now be permitted at gyms.
- However, the province will hold off on easing restrictions further on retail businesses, hotels, banquet halls and children's sports.
- Kenney cited a plateauing of case numbers and a slight increase in the testing positivity rate for the decision to delay the full reopening of Stage 2.
- The province will wait "at least three weeks" before the cabinet COVID-19 committee makes a decision about moving forward with Step 3, Shandro said at Monday's news conference.
- The province had set out two benchmarks to consider before moving between the steps of its plan to lift restrictions: time and hospitalizations.
- Monday will mark the specified three weeks since the province moved into Phase 1, when restaurants and bars were permitted to reopen for indoor service, with restrictions.
- Alberta is currently below its 450 hospitalizations, which was the benchmark for moving to Phase 2.
- As of Monday, there were 257 people being treated in hospital for COVID-19, an increase of seven from the day before, and 48 in intensive care beds.
- Alberta reported 291 new cases of COVID-19 on Monday, down from 301 the day before.
- About 5,900 tests were completed with a positivity rate of 4.9 per cent.
- There are 4,674