TORONTO — Ontario’s website for booking COVID-19 vaccination appointments will begin a “soft launch” in six public health units this week, two weeks before it becomes available across the province, The Canadian Press has learned.
But the website will not be available to the general population in those regions, said a senior government source not authorized to speak publicly about the plan.
Instead, public health officials will reach out to a small number of individuals who are 80 or older, as well as some eligible health-care workers, starting Monday.
The source said the plan will help the province test components of the system before the full launch, determine whether any changes need to be made to the system and organize the vaccination of larger populations.
The site is a “public-facing extension” of the COVaxON system the province has been using since the start of the vaccine rollout, the source said, and will also serve to keep track of inoculation data.
The regions participating in the soft launch are Kingston, Frontenac, and Lennox and Addington; Peterborough County-City; Hastings and Prince Edward Counties; Leeds, Grenville, and Lanark; Grey Bruce; and Lambton.
The source noted the site will not be available to other regions before March 15, even those that have already begun vaccinating members of the 80-and-over age group such as York and Peel.
Those regions must use “existing relationships with residents” to book the vaccinations until the online platform launches on March 15, when they’re expected to switch to the provincial system.
The source said the website will focus at first on appointments at mass vaccination sites, but the province will work with public health units in the coming weeks to make sure it’s compatible with other facilities such as hospital sites and mobile clinics.
The government has faced criticism for what some describe as the slow rollout of its vaccine booking portal, which is expected to launch the same day the head of the vaccine task force said people aged 80 and over would start getting the shots.
Retired general Rick Hillier said his team was “furiously working” to test and refine the site so it would be up-and-running on time.
Health Minister Christine Elliott defended the timeline, saying the government was still testing the site and wanted to ensure it won’t crash when it goes live.
“We don’t want to rush to failure,” she said last week.