Wednesday, July 8, 2026
ADVT 
National

No choice but scramble on COVID-19: AG

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Mar, 2021 06:09 PM
  • No choice but scramble on COVID-19: AG

The federal auditor general says the government moved as fast as it could to respond to the COVID-19 pandemic, but had no other choice because it wasn't prepared for one in the first place.

Auditor general Karen Hogan's report on the government's public health response found the Public Health Agency of Canada spent years letting elements of pandemic preparedness slide and COVID-19 left it scrambling.

She also found the government's financial support programs rolled out well, but now extensive efforts will be needed to ensure the money went where it was supposed to.

Hogan says Canadians will never know whether things could have been different, but the pandemic has made it clear: the government cannot just ignore long-standing problem, because they'll never go away.

She says among those issues is weakness in pan-Canadian co-ordination.

She's now calling for an independent review to get the country as a whole on better footing for the next national emergency.

Photo courtesy of Instagram. 

MORE National ARTICLES

Woman dead, man hurt in shooting in Surrey, B.C

Woman dead, man hurt in shooting in Surrey, B.C
Officers found a woman in grave condition and a man suffering non-life-threatening injuries inside the home.

Woman dead, man hurt in shooting in Surrey, B.C

B.C. expands mask requirements in schools

B.C. expands mask requirements in schools
Previously, students and staff were only required to wear masks in areas where interactions are not controlled, such as in hallways, libraries and on school buses.

B.C. expands mask requirements in schools

Canada sees 30-per-cent drop in COVID cases

Canada sees 30-per-cent drop in COVID cases
Even with this decline, Tam said the current caseload continues to burden local health-care resources, particularly in regions with high infection rates.

Canada sees 30-per-cent drop in COVID cases

PBO: Work-from-home tax break to cost feds $260M

PBO: Work-from-home tax break to cost feds $260M
Workers who have been able to do their jobs remotely have been asked to do so since the spring as part of public health efforts to slow the spread of COVID-19.

PBO: Work-from-home tax break to cost feds $260M

RCMP cameras to cost $131 million over five years

RCMP cameras to cost $131 million over five years
A costing note Thursday said the RCMP is expected to purchase 12,500 camera subscriptions for use across the country at 700 detachments.

RCMP cameras to cost $131 million over five years

Vaccine makers all gave Canadian production a pass

Vaccine makers all gave Canadian production a pass
She says all the manufacturers studied what was possible in Canada for production and the existing biomanufacturing facilities were not suitable.

Vaccine makers all gave Canadian production a pass