Sunday, December 28, 2025
ADVT 
National

Military members asked to use COVID-19 app

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 Sep, 2020 06:47 PM
  • Military members asked to use COVID-19 app

Canadian Armed Forces members and their civilian colleagues in the Department of National Defence are being strongly encouraged to download the federal government's smartphone application for tracking potential exposure to COVID-19.

Chief of defence staff Gen. Jonathan Vance and Defence Department deputy minister Jody Thomas say they understand some may have concerns when it comes to privacy and secrecy.

But they say the app has been cleared by Defence Department experts and that while installing it is voluntary, using it is one way military personnel and defence officials can help prevent a second wave of COVID-19.

The call to arms comes as Newfoundland and Labrador joins Ontario as the only provinces using the app, though Saskatchewan has said it is considering whether to join.

Quebec has indicated it does not plan to adopt the app for now.

The government says the app has been downloaded 2.2 million times since it was rolled out in Ontario in late July and that 112 people have voluntarily used it to identify themselves as having COVID-19.

The app uses Bluetooth to exchange randomly generated numbers with nearby smartphones and alerts users if they have been close to someone who later enters a code saying he or she has tested positive for the virus that causes the illness.

MORE National ARTICLES

Bad chocks, brake training blamed for crash to prime minister's plane

Bad chocks, brake training blamed for crash to prime minister's plane
Military investigators have revealed the sequence of events that led the Royal Canadian Air Force plane normally used by the prime minister to run into a tow tractor and hangar wall and suffer severe damage.

Bad chocks, brake training blamed for crash to prime minister's plane

Senate ethics committee urges censure of Tory senator over trip to China

Senate ethics committee urges censure of Tory senator over trip to China
The Senate's ethics committee is recommending that a Conservative senator be censured for breaching the upper house’s ethics code when he accepted an all-expenses paid trip to China in 2017.

Senate ethics committee urges censure of Tory senator over trip to China

Surrey RCMP recover items stolen from schools

Surrey RCMP recover items stolen from schools
Search warrants executed at three separate residences, led Surrey RCMP to the seizure of items stolen from Surrey schools during a series of break and enters.

Surrey RCMP recover items stolen from schools

New data sees small increase in veterans' historical risk of suicide

New data sees small increase in veterans' historical risk of suicide
The federal government has released updated figures showing once again that Canadian veterans are at greater risk of suicide than those who have never served in uniform.

New data sees small increase in veterans' historical risk of suicide

Prices faced by consumers rising faster than inflation rate, BoC deputy says

Prices faced by consumers rising faster than inflation rate, BoC deputy says
The prices Canadians have reported paying for goods and services have been rising more than the official inflation rate, a senior Bank of Canada official says.

Prices faced by consumers rising faster than inflation rate, BoC deputy says

Pandemic-related changes to court system might become permanent: top judge

Pandemic-related changes to court system might become permanent: top judge
Canada's top judge says some of the innovations that courts have embraced during the COVID-19 pandemic might become permanent.

Pandemic-related changes to court system might become permanent: top judge