The federal government is creating a new agency to improve Canada's ability to handle rapidly spreading infectious diseases and protect Canadians from future pandemics. Industry Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne said the agency is meant to preserve the "top-gun team" of public servants that helped steer Canadians through COVID-19. Health Emergency Readiness Canada is being tasked with boosting Canada's life-sciences sector and ensuring Canadians get faster access to vaccines, medical therapies and diagnostics by accelerating the transition from research to commercialization.
"The danger would have been (that) if we don't have a permanent agency sitting somewhere, that collective knowledge that we have accumulated during COVID would even be dispersed eventually, perhaps even lost within the civil service," Champagne told reporters on Tuesday. "We're pulling them together in a team so that when people are talking about health, emergency readiness, they know where to knock." How UWindsor researchers are preparing for the next pandemic Quebec judge OK's class-action suit over COVID-19 outbreaks in long-term care homes The new agency will be based in the Industry Department and will include staff from the Public Health Agency of Canada and Health Canada.
Champagne said it requires no new legislation and is based on spending Parliament already approved through this year's budget. "We want to keep a very close nexus with industry," he said. The agency is meant to co-ordinate effo.