I called it a national standard, Mr. Chair.
I called it a national standard because, having read the national emergency documents, I understood that there were recommendations that came out of SARS. I would imagine that in a program as important as this, there would be standards for what the levels and quantities of supply should look like. Perhaps “national standards” is an inaccurate thing for me to say, given the flexibility of this particular program. Maybe that will be a recommendation and an outcome from this motion.
To be very clear, Mr. Chair, there were recommendations on this that go back 10 years. Post-SARS, we saw fit to have national emergency strategic stockpile warehouses across the country. Somebody, somewhere along the line, made the decision to close them down—to close three of them down.
I'll reiterate. We knew that two million were thrown out in Regina. I'm seeking to find out how many more of these units were thrown out and whether or not they were ever replenished.
If I can answer the second point in terms of context and this language of knocking it “out of the park”, 20,000 Canadians are dead. You want to talk about procurement that took months to get online, to where we actually had real domestic products here, shipped, on the ground, that were qualified for distribution. Of the first 11 million N95 masks to hit the ground, the soil here in Canada, nine million were deemed unfit for use as N95 masks. We throw away millions, we bring in millions and all the while Canadians are contracting COVID.
As for the mental gymnastics of the contortionist, Mr. Chair, of patting ourselves on the back on this file when we failed to live up to the recommendations of our own reports that go back a decade, it's just simply something that I can't fathom. We know that their budget got slashed almost in half. Their staffing got slashed. This government is again failing to meet their own recommendations, and I would like to get to the heart of the matter, which is how we started off this pandemic.
We now know that masks are critical. We know, through some of the things that I was able to obtain, that provinces, right off the hop.... From the moment we started, we were behind. We responded to China and other places and sent this abroad, but then, as soon as Newfoundland, B.C. and medevac in the north were seeking N95 masks, staff said that it far exceeded their current stockpile.... I would wager that if we had had a system in place with the kind of management logistics that would have replenished the two million in Regina, that if we had kept those warehouses, we could have filled those requests right off the bat.
We're in our third wave right now, so on hitting it out of the park, which park are you in? We're modelling scenarios that are worse than anything we've ever seen before. We now know it to be true that this is airborne. N95 masks are going to be critical. The fact that we want to spend this committee patting ourselves on the back a year into this game negates the accountability this government has on the failure of having adequate supplies in the NESS to begin with.
I would love to be proven wrong. I would love for these documents to come back and say, “We threw out six million and we got six million, so it was a net-zero loss—no big deal—and we are ready to go.” However, that's just simply not the case. There have been cuts to this program. They were cutting their own corners. They're not listening to their own recommendations. Dr. Tam was on the record 10 years ago in talking about post-SARS and what we needed to do. They knew, yet they failed to act on the national emergency strategic stockpile.
When you ask me what I'm getting at.... We shouldn't be in this third wave. That's what I'm getting at. We should have a program where we have domestic supplies taken care of. I would love to see it nationalized. I happen to think that the government should be producing critical PPE and vaccines, quite frankly, yet here we are, scrambling to this very day.
Again, it was Ms. Thornton before. It's Ms. Evans today. It's not about the individual people. It's not even about Mr. Kusmierczyk. I'm fired up because it has been a year in the making for me to get these documents. They filibustered the last time. You'll recall that I passed the motion, Parliament got prorogued and I brought it back. I got superheated. In fact, I even had suggestions from members on the other side that I needed to chill out on this.
I'm not chilling out on this, because 20,000 people have died. That's where we are. I want to find out if this national emergency strategic stockpile is under a better management system where it can deal with its own logistics in a way that doesn't result in millions of critical PPE being thrown into dumpsters on the eve of a global pandemic. It's quite simple.
I hope that the clarification on the amendment in terms of the numbers and getting clear about what those supply levels were.... I predict we're going to see a drastic decline without a replenishment, and I predict we're going to see that we came into this pandemic vastly unprepared despite our own recommendations. That's what I'm predicting, and I would love to be proven wrong.