Tuesday, June 9, 2026
ADVT 
National

Quebec won't use federal contact tracing app

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Aug, 2020 09:20 PM
  • Quebec won't use federal contact tracing app

The Quebec government says it won't recommend Quebecers download the federal COVID-19 contact tracing smartphone application — at least for now.

Eric Caire, minister responsible for digital transformation, said Tuesday the app isn't needed at the moment because the province's infection rate is in decline.

"Given that the pandemic is under control ... in Quebec with the measures in place, the government of Quebec has decided not to go ahead with a contact notification application app," he said.

But, Caire added, health officials are still doing the groundwork needed to deploy a contact tracing app if it becomes necessary in the future.

The free and voluntary COVID Alert app uses random Bluetooth codes, not location data, to notify users if their phones have recently spent time near the phone of a person who later tests positive for COVID-19.

The app is linked to the Ontario health system and the federal government said it planned to deploy the technology across the country.

Canada's chief public health officer, Dr. Theresa Tam, said Tuesday that federal officials would like as many Canadians as possible to download the app.

"Sometimes Canadians or people who reside in this country do travel interprovincially," she said in Ottawa. "Having an application that can apply across jurisdictional borders is very helpful."

Tam added, however, that the app was only "one layer of protection," in addition to all the other measures governments were taking to control the pandemic.

Quebec Health Minister Christian Dube said Tuesday his province remains open to using the technology but wants more time to evaluate it and to address public concerns. "I think we didn't say no. We said we don't need it right now."

An online public consultation conducted in July and early August indicated that 77 per cent of the 16,456 Quebecers surveyed believed the app could be useful, and 75 per cent said they were ready to install it.

Dube said the numbers suggest there's still "nervousness" surrounding the idea of the app, even though most Quebecers are open to it under certain conditions.

But Premier Francois Legault, speaking in St-Hyacinthe, Que., later in the day, said many Quebecers, as well as the province's three main opposition parties, were uncomfortable with the technology.

"What we see in Quebec is that at least a good part of Quebecers are scared about protecting their personal data," he said. "So they don't agree with this tracing application."

A number of experts who testified in front of a Quebec legislative commission also expressed concern about contact tracing apps.

Legault said that if an app is needed, he'd prefer to use one developed in Quebec.

MORE National ARTICLES

Vancouver police arrest 14 people after elementary school break-in

Vancouver police arrest 14 people after elementary school break-in
VANCOUVER - Fourteen people who entered an East Vancouver elementary school Saturday evening in a protest action aimed at securing emergency housing for homeless people during the COVID-19 pandemic were arrested.

Vancouver police arrest 14 people after elementary school break-in

BC Ferries ship sustained some damage after hitting berth, no one injured

BC Ferries ship sustained some damage after hitting berth, no one injured
VANCOUVER - A BC Ferries ship hit the dock at Tsawwassen ferry terminal, resulting in two cancelled departures and a four-hour disembarkment delay for some passengers.

BC Ferries ship sustained some damage after hitting berth, no one injured

Sleep struggles: pandemic could impact body's fear response, cause poor sleep

Sleep struggles: pandemic could impact body's fear response, cause poor sleep
Tossing and turning in the middle of the night. Lying awake for lengthy stretches. Waking up groggy. The COVID-19 pandemic seems to be messing with a number of peoples' ability to get a good night's sleep these days. And sleep experts aren't surprised by that.    

Sleep struggles: pandemic could impact body's fear response, cause poor sleep

Here are some of the deadliest mass killings in recent Canadian history:

Here are some of the deadliest mass killings in recent Canadian history:
April 19, 2020: Seventeen people are killed after a man who at one point wore a police uniform and drove a mock-up cruiser travelled across northern Nova Scotia. An RCMP officer is among the dead. Police say the suspected shooter, 51-year-old Gabriel Wortman, was killed after being intercepted by officers in Enfield, N.S.

Here are some of the deadliest mass killings in recent Canadian history:

Those who knew Nova Scotia gunman shocked by rampage

Those who knew Nova Scotia gunman shocked by rampage
Neighbours and schoolmates of the man responsible for a killing rampage that left at least 19 people dead in northern Nova Scotia were attempting Monday to come to terms with the tragedy.  A 23 year member of the RCMP police force Const Heidi Stevenson was killed, a mother of two, and another officer is recovering from non life threating injuries. 

Those who knew Nova Scotia gunman shocked by rampage

COVID-19 prompts bus driver layoffs, service cuts for Metro Vancouver transit

COVID-19 prompts bus driver layoffs, service cuts for Metro Vancouver transit
There have been significant layoffs of bus drivers and deep service cuts on buses, SeaBus, SkyTrain and West Coast Express across Metro Vancouver. Nearly 1,500 bus drivers and other transit workers across Metro Vancouver are being laid off as TransLink faces plunging ridership during the COVID-19 pandemic.    

COVID-19 prompts bus driver layoffs, service cuts for Metro Vancouver transit