Yes. It is. No doubt a judge applying Jordan, in the wise words you just quoted, would perhaps use the fact of the COVID pandemic to not grant a stay. But remember, every time you deploy a judge to a criminal case to deal with anything, because it's a priority over all of the other cases because of Jordan, you've just used judicial resources that can't be used in other types of cases where there aren't time limits.
So you're missing the point, with respect. I'm saying that a pause is necessary on this issue so that judicial resources are not deployed as a priority in criminal cases at the expense of family, child protection and civil cases. That's what's happening. We need a pause on the monopolization of our judges in the superior courts across the country because of the effect of the Jordan case and its unintended consequences. They didn't foresee the pandemic coming. You can't just deal with that on a case-by-case basis, because if you do, you're tying up judicial resources and you're just compounding the problem.