To me, this is not a political topic at all. We can bring in two facets of the existing government, open government.
What was the public health impact of ArriveCAN? This has not been communicated clearly to the public.
In terms of decision-making about the use of technology, I'd like to share with everyone here that there was a major cultural deference to the Public Health Agency of Canada, which makes a lot of sense in a pandemic. However, deference to the Public Health Agency of Canada on the use of technology does not make any sense. This is not something where the implications of applying technology and all of its related infrastructures that are upstream of both PHAC and CBSA...these are totally different issues that don't sit neatly in the realm of privacy.
This second piece here is important, as well, which is that we understand why the Public Health Agency of Canada—nothing in the Quarantine Act said that we had to have an app, nor a mandatory app—had the authority to exert that decision, when it was against what all of the privacy commissioners recommended for public trust. If there was a good reason, back to open government, it should have been communicated, but it wasn't.