Auditor General finds Canada’s public health agency wasn’t ready for pandemic despite warnings

A new report just out finds Ottawa could have been better prepared for COVID-19. 

Canada’s Auditor General Karen Hogan says despite decades of warnings, the Public Health Agency of Canada was not ready for the pandemic.

Hogan said the agency did not plan, nor prepare for a nationwide quarantine of the scale seen in the past year. 

She said the report found that PHAC underestimated the severity of the threat posed at the onset of the pandemic. 

The report also showed the way the Canada Border Services Agency and PHAC handled border restrictions impacted efforts to control the spread of the virus.

Mo Fahim
Mo Fahim
The Moose News Reporter, If you see any news in the making contact The Moose News Team at 100news.moosefm.com or call 867-920-2523

Continue Reading

You may also like



cjcd Now playing play

- Advertisement -

Related Articles

- Advertisement -

Latest News

More NWT wellness programs available in Hay River area

Wellness and spiritual support services are expanding in the Hay River area through community organizations including the Northwest Territory Métis Nation’s Healing and Wellness program and partnerships between the social services authority and the community library.

AVENS holding second annual classic car show this weekend

AVENS – A Community for Seniors is inviting the community to join them for their Second Annual Classic Car, Truck and Bike Show and Shine this Father’s Day weekend.

Yellowknife RCMP looking for missing person

Yellowknife RCMP are asking for assistance from the public in locating a person who has been reported missing.

Folk On The Rocks announces new trivia night

Folk On The Rocks has announced a new event they will be holding in the lead-up to this year’s festival. FOTR’s Big Shiny Trivia Night will give participants an opportunity to learn about the line-up for this year’s festival and win prizes as well.

Local group calls on GNWT to prioritize healing root causes of addictions and illness

Members of the Endacho Healing Society are calling on the territorial government to make trauma healing a funded priority. The group is laying the ground for a sustainable operation model to heal the root cause of unresolved trauma from addictions and mental health challenges to family breakdowns. They say a sustainable operational model would allow Northerners to access support without having to travel south.