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Tomken Road Middle School is seen in Mississauga, Ont., on March 31, 2020.Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press

A former Ontario education minister says the province should actively test for COVID-19 at schools in virus hot spots around the province.

Mitzie Hunter says in a letter to Health Minister Christine Elliott that the government should conduct “surveillance” testing to protect students and staff at these schools.

The legislator, who was education minister in the previous Liberal government, says testing should be optional, but argues it would give parents greater peace of mind as school starts next month.

She says testing should be conducted before the start of classes and continue into the beginning of the school year.

Ms. Elliott’s office did not immediately provide comment on Ms. Hunter’s letter.

The province announced its plan to reopen schools last month and has been under pressure to reduce elementary class sizes to increase physical distancing among students.

Ontario reported 76 new cases of COVID-19 on Thursday and one new death related to the virus. The province also reported 76 newly resolved cases.

The total number of cases now stands at 41,048, which includes 2,793 deaths and 37,291 cases marked as resolved.

Ms. Elliott said that because of an issue with province’s reporting system, data were not available Thursday from 11 of Ontario’s 34 public health units. She said cases in hospital and patients on ventilators both declined as intensive-care admissions remained stable.

The province was able to complete 25,917 tests over the previous day.

The Ontario government also extended its emergency orders on Thursday, saying it continues to need the tools to address the COVID-19 pandemic.

Solicitor-General Sylvia Jones said that while virus cases continue to go down, the province will extend most orders until Sept. 22. Orders restricting activities under Stage 3, governing health-care worker redeployment and management of long-term care homes remain in place.

The province said it will let some orders lapse, including one that allowed school boards to redeploy workers to health-care facilities to respond to the pandemic.

That emergency order will expire on Aug. 31.

Ms. Jones said the government is conducting ongoing reviews of all of the orders to determine if they are still necessary.

Globe health columnist André Picard and senior editor Nicole MacIntyre discuss the many issues surrounding sending kids back to school. André says moving forward isn't about there being no COVID-19 cases, but limiting their number and severity through distancing, smaller classes, masks and good hygiene.

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