The B.C. government has launched an independent review looking at how it has responded to the COVID-19 pandemic.
The review will examine how the province prepared before the arrival of the SARS-CoV-2 virus over two years ago. But also how government improved its operational effectiveness as the pandemic evolved, and what can be done to prepare for the next infectious disease or disaster. It will review the government response from January 2020 into 2022.
“The scope of the review excludes an assessment of economic recovery and public policy decisions made by government to deal with the consequences of the pandemic and decisions made by the independent provincial health officer,” states the review’s .
“The review will, however, look at how these decisions were made.”
The B.C. government added in a press release that decisions made about economic recovery, including supports for small businesses and families, will not be part of the review.
Minister of Public Safety and Solicitor General Mike Farnworth has appointed three senior public servants to oversee the process. They will consult with First Nations, other levels of government and independent regulators, among others.
Individual British Columbians will have five weeks to around how they or their business fared throughout the pandemic, and how they have been affected by the government's response to the pandemic.
The review will look into three big questions: how government identified the widespread implications of the pandemic; how decisions were made to respond in a timely and informed way; and how those decisions were communicated and carried out in line with government and public health policy.
“Not only will this help to inform preparations for and the response to the next pandemic, which will inevitably occur in the future, but also contribute to planning and operational readiness for responses to the full range of risks of disasters and emergencies, which include earthquakes, climate change-induced extreme weather and wildfires, and many other situations that may affect large areas of the province,” stated the terms of reference.
The public engagement process will close on April 20 at 4 p.m.
A full report is expected by Sept. 30, 2022.
The review comes as the number of deaths due to COVID-19 approach 3,000 in B.C. In an effort to contain the spread of the virus, multiple levels of government and businesses have implemented a number of restrictions since the first cases of COVID-19 were isolated in the winter of 2020.
That has provoked a backlash among a minority of Canadians, prompting some to join a so-called “Freedom Convoy,” beginning in Delta, B.C., and ending in a multi-week occupation of downtown Ottawa.
Since then, several provincial governments, including B.C., have moved to lift restrictions. Health officials have cited falling case numbers, higher rates of vaccination and natural immunity after the Omicron variant swept through the province.
On Tuesday, COVID-19 hospitalizations dropped to 345 — the lowest since Jan. 6 — with 50 of those in intensive care units.
The highly infectious Omicron variant emerged in late 2021 as the dominant strain in Canada. The variant has been documented to produce a range of severity among the infected, but on average, has shown to provoke less severe symptoms.
On Wednesday, federal government sources told the Canadian Press it would requirement as of April 1.
Despite B.C. dropping its mask mandate and setting an April 8 end date for the province’s vaccine passport, opponents of the B.C. government's COVID-19 restrictions continue to organize under the “Freedom Convoy” banner.
On Sunday, March 20, they plan to in what one organizer described in videos posted to social media as “Bearhug B.C.”
In some parts of the world, COVID-19 case rates are climbing once again. The recently said that last week cases began to rise globally, reversing a downward trend seen since January. Upticks have been seen across Africa, the Western Pacific and to a lesser degree in Europe, where a new, more infectious Omicron subvariant, known as BA.2, has taken hold.
Even with that rise, new coronavirus deaths dropped 17 per cent across the world last week, said the WHO.
With files from Brendan Kergin, the Canadian Press and the Associated Press.