(abbrev) "Dr Supriya Sharma, Health Cda’s regulatory branch, would give no firm date for authzn of 1st of 4 vaccines currently under review. But said Cda’s decision expected around same time as the US & EU, possib as early as Dec 10."
2/ ... yet opposition parties make it sound like Canada only country that hasn't approved vaccines.
US and EU haven't either. And sounds like (per quote in first tweet above) Health Canada's regulators ready to approve around same time.
Opposition need to respect sciences!
3/ When you think about it. Most of the complaints from Oppo politicians, have been because they don't respect Canada's regulatory process (yet rest of world does), and/or don't respect democratic non-interference from Ottawa in independent branch of Health Canada ...
4/ Oppo also blurs line betw fed & prov w/r/t demanding detailed plans for vaccine distrib'n. While feds have distrib'n task force for getting vaccines to regions, up to premiers how they distribute. Dr Tam, Dr Njoo can recommend, but decisions made ultimately by premiers.
Besides announcements about extending & expanding COVID-19 progs (aid to local bus; for research for LTC orgs, and so on), PMJT said "we need to do our part as Canadians to lean on each other, to keep our distances, wear our mask, avoid gatherings, and use the COVID Alert app"
2/ PM Trudeau finished his introductory speech with reference to yesterday's UN Indigenous Rights Bill announcement. Here's a thread I posted during the press briefing on this
Catherine Cullen, in response to Michelle Rempel-Garner claiming no fed vaccine distribution plan, asks MRG "Can you really say there's no plan, when there will be a dry run conducted by the military, across the country?"
2/ MRG says lack of dates.
Catherine Cullen says "you mean lack of specificity? They did say the first quarter"
3/ Don Davies wants to know the order of priority - who gets it first. Catherine Cullen says "but isn't that up to the provinces?"
Don Davies "I want more information"
Catherine Cullen "You don't want the feds to decide this for the provinces & territories, do you?"
2/ powerful speech from @perrybellegarde, on @CBCNews. Thank you, CBC, for including sidebars with key points underpinning this momentous event - "Ottawa Introduces UNDRIP Legislation"
(previous Bill C-262 introduced in 2018, stalled in Senate)
3/ from the sidebars (h/t @CBCNews):
What is the 'UNDRIP'?
. The United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
. 46 articles ratified in 2007 by 144 members of UN Gen'l Assembly
. Recognizes basic human rights of Indigenous people
excellent explainer by @janycemcgregor just now, on @CBCNews - regarding boil water advisories
Thanks for explaining how complicated this is - orig budget not enough, top-up in econ statement ystrday should bring closer to possibility of meeting goals. ...
2/ (cont'd re boil water advisory file) - that pandemic delays to construction adding costs. More to it than construction, also maintenance, training locals, connecting to homes, and so on
3/ my take-away (correct me if I'm wrong): GoC initially underestimated amt $$ needed to meet March 2021 goal. Ystrday's econ statement includes $$ to make up for this but difficult to predict amt needed. When construction proj's delayed, costs can skyrocket. COVID-19 delays
It's sad when the US (Terrence Daniels) & the UK (BBC) does a better job of outlining & understanding Canada's DPM Freeland's (Finance Minister) Dec 1, 2020 Economic Statement - than our (Canada's) opposition members & #Cdnmedia
2/ from the BBC article "Monday's fiscal plan pledges C$1bn to help provinces and territories improve Covid-19 infection control in long-term care facilities."
Note, fed NDP leader Jagmeet Singh was claiming there was nothing in the statement for long-term care homes
3/ from the BBC article "Industries that have been particularly vulnerable to economic shutdowns like tourism, travel and arts will be eligible for business loans up to C$1m, with a 10-year term."
Note, #Cdnmedia were falsely claiming there wasn't anything for tourism industry