1) Less evasive answering. I don't mean omitting nuance. I mean simply saying 'I don't know' or 'We're not prepared to discuss that yet' rather than long-winded non-answers.
2) Finish rolling out the programs to address financial loss already, this drips n' drabs business isn't reasonable. Its entirely clear that many of these decisions have been taken as a group by cabinet and are being announced over multiple days for political reasons. This means depriving people of information that would be useful in the here and now; and not providing as clear a picture as is practical.
3) Begin the process of describing what the end game looks like, in consultation w/the Premiers (and it goes w/out saying, the experts). That doesn't mean hard dates for everything where that is premature. But it does mean revealing forward thinking and giving people something to look forward to.
ie. when the R-Factor (reproduction rate of the virus is less than 1, and the number of deaths is below 'x' per day etc. we will begin to reopen services/businesses etc. The exact day will vary by region, based on figures there, but considering the national situation"
That to me would elevate a decent performance to a very good one.