seventy-six per cent of respondents said they expect a second wave will hit canada. and 32 per cent said they expect a second wave that is stronger than the first, with another 40 per cent saying they expect it to be just as strong.
bourque said that fear is also reflected in widespread support for a go-slow approach to reopening the country after three months of pandemic-induced lockdowns.
two-thirds of respondents said governments should maintain the current, cautious pace of reopening, while another 21 per cent said they should slow down. just 13 per cent wanted the pace sped up.
fewer than 10 per cent supported reopening restaurants, hotels, gyms, bars, concert halls and theatres without any restrictions.
as long as safety precautions are in place, 68 per cent were comfortable seeing restaurants reopen, 67 per cent hotels, 55 per cent gyms or other fitness facilities and 50 per cent bars. but even with restrictions, just 44 per cent supported reopening concert halls and theatres, while 49 per cent were opposed.
“canadians are being extremely prudent and careful about how they want us to go into sort of this exit strategy of wave 1, probably because they fear wave 2 is coming soon,” said bourque.