Feds got supplies to provinces during COVID-19 despite issues with stockpile: AG
OTTAWA — The Public Health Agency of Canada couldn’t immediately handle a massive surge in demand for personal protective equipment when COVID-19 began because it had ignored years of warnings that the national emergency stockpile of medical supplies wasn’t being properly managed.
Auditor general Karen Hogan delivered the finding in a report tabled in the House of Commons Wednesday.
Ottawa has spent more than $7 billion on medical devices and protective equipment since the pandemic began, but Hogan’s team selected four items to study for the purpose of the audit: N95 masks, ventilators, surgical gowns and testing swabs.
Hogan concluded Ottawa was eventually able to help provinces and territories get the equipment they needed to respond to the pandemic but it took weeks to get there and a substantial overhaul of government policies including bulk purchasing supplies and faster licensing for new suppliers.


