Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Opposition call for transparent COVID decisions

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 Mar, 2022 04:53 PM
  • Opposition call for transparent COVID decisions

OTTAWA - What will it take for the federal government to lift COVID-19 vaccine mandates? Health Minister Jean-Yves Duclos says it's complicated.

Conservative and NDP members of the House of Commons health committee hammered the minister with questions about a timeline, a benchmark, or a set of conditions that would trigger an end to vaccine requirements for travellers and federal employees.

"(Canadians) want to know what it will take for the mandates to end," said Conservative critic Michael Barrett told the committee Monday.

Duclos had no single answer, instead giving a long list of indicators the federal government is watching.

The decision, he said, will be based on everything from the vaccination rate, hospital capacity, and domestic and international epidemiology to the impact of long-COVID, the economy, and other social impacts.

While mandates are reviewed on a weekly basis, he said it would be "irresponsible" to answer whether there is a specific plan to end federal public health mandates.

"To be responsible means that you need to follow the evidence, the science and the precautionary principle and adjust or analyze policies as things evolve," he said.

Opposition parties have increasingly called for more transparency about how the federal government makes public health decisions under its jurisdiction.

"I find that quite shocking, that there's not an answer to be given, that it's much too complex for the health committee and for Canadians to understand," Conservative MP Stephen Ellis said to the minister at committee.

When asked what specific metrics could be used to decide when it's safe enough to call down federal mandates, Duclos offered a list of different numbers instead.

He said there were probably about 20,000 new cases of COVID-19, and a 10 to 30 per cent rate of infected people developing long-COVID.

He also told the committee $23,000 is the average cost to treat a patient with COVID-19 in the hospital, that less than 60 per cent of eligible Canadians have received a booster vaccine, and that 59 people died from the virus in Canada on Sunday.

"It gives you an example of the type of numbers, people and facts that we need to consider," he said.

The COVID-19 situation is "unstable," chief public health officer Dr. Theresa Tam told the committee.

Internationally, there has been an uptick in COVID-19 cases largely driven by a sub-mutation of the Omicron variant called BA.2.

While she does not ultimately make decisions about federal mandates, Tam suggested the government is waiting to see whether there is a resurgence in coming weeks and how provincial health systems are able to handle it.

MORE National ARTICLES

The mayor of Penticton accused in lawsuit of threatening to kill siblings

The mayor of Penticton accused in lawsuit of threatening to kill siblings
A notice of application filed last week on behalf of his brother, Nicholas Vassilakakis, includes a transcript of a voice mail the mayor allegedly left their sister making the threat.

The mayor of Penticton accused in lawsuit of threatening to kill siblings

Provincial health officials says uncertainty about new variants BA.2

Provincial health officials says uncertainty about new variants BA.2
She says the province will integrate wastewater surveillance testing into its regular surveillance of respiratory illness including influenza, and also include other pathogens to get a periodic snapshot of what else may be circulating in communities.

Provincial health officials says uncertainty about new variants BA.2

Interest rate hike won't cool housing, say experts

Interest rate hike won't cool housing, say experts
While the interest rate’s impact on prices may be limited, the increase Wednesday will affect some mortgage holders immediately. Interest rate hikes typically weigh on homeowners with variable-rate mortgages because many banks use the central bank’s key rate to dictate how they should change their prime interest rate. 

Interest rate hike won't cool housing, say experts

Trudeau says sanction solidarity surprises Putin

Trudeau says sanction solidarity surprises Putin
Trudeau says Putin likely never imagined that Germany would freeze its lucrative Nord Stream 2 pipeline project with Russia or decide to send anti-tank weapons and surface to air missiles to Ukraine.

Trudeau says sanction solidarity surprises Putin

Surrey RCMP need help locating missing male Jimsher Sidhu

Surrey RCMP need help locating missing male Jimsher Sidhu
Jimsher Sidhu is described as a 25 year old South Asian male, 6’3” tall, 250 lbs.  He has short  black hair and brown eyes. There is no clothing description at this time. 

Surrey RCMP need help locating missing male Jimsher Sidhu

Bank of Canada hikes key interest rate to 0.5 percent

Bank of Canada hikes key interest rate to 0.5 percent
The central bank increased its key rate by a quarter of a percentage point to 0.5 per cent on Wednesday in a bid to help fight inflation which is at its highest level since 1991.

Bank of Canada hikes key interest rate to 0.5 percent