Good afternoon. My name is Daniel Lavoie. I have already been introduced a few times. I am with the Emergency Management and National Security Branch of Public Safety Canada. I am accompanied by Serge Beaudoin, Director General of Preparedness and Recovery, which is part of my branch.
I would like to thank the committee for inviting us to appear today as it reviews issues regarding the Government of Canada's preparedness for H1N1 pandemic influenza. Public Safety Canada has been actively supporting the health portfolio in the management of the Government of Canada's response.
Public Safety has been doing this by working with departments and agencies in the preparation of their business continuity plans, their pandemic plans, and the identification of their critical services. I'm sure we'll get to talk a lot about those today. We are also working with the provinces and territories to ensure that we are ready with a coordinated response.
Under the Emergency Management Act, all federal institutions are required to have a business continuity plan that includes programs or measures to provide for the continuity of their operations in the event of an emergency.
Departments and agencies are also required to have a pandemic strategy. In support of this approach, in 2006, departments and agencies were asked to develop a pandemic strategy as part of their business continuity plans. Deputy ministers have responded by taking steps to be ready.
Public Safety has been assisting departments in completing their business continuity plans. Public Safety has also been evaluating these business continuity plans in partnership with the Treasury Board Secretariat. We are encouraged by the results, which clearly demonstrate that deputy heads are aware of their responsibilities to prepare plans.
In this context, Public Safety Canada and the Treasury Board Secretariat are also reviewing the critical services that are identified in those business continuity plans.
While the health specialists ascertain that the virus is relatively mild, it is important that departments and agencies be ready to provide these critical services, regardless of the reasons for the disruption to their regular operations.
Critical services are those that have a significant impact on the lives of Canadians and Canadian society, as a whole. Examples of critical services offered by the Government of Canada are—and these are just some examples—the production and dissemination of weather warnings by Environment Canada, the daily operations of the Bank of Canada in terms of payments and securities clearing and settlement functions, and the monitoring of adverse reactions to products such as drugs by Health Canada.
As I said, those are just a few examples of critical services that need to be maintained at all times.
Planning for emergencies is part of the regular business of departments and agencies. To be effective, plans need to adapt to emerging risks. In 2006, the Government of Canada introduced a number of measures to enhance pandemic preparedness.
Over the summer that ended last week, the department took several additional steps to prepare for a potential second wave of the virus. For example, we are currently assessing the pandemic readiness component of the business continuity plans of departments and agencies. We are working with federal organizations to identify their critical services and assess the readiness component of the business continuity plans. Indications are that there is a high degree of readiness among federal institutions to provide continuity of operations, including critical services.
Of course, it is not enough to have plans. These plans need to be tested. We have been working with federal departments to exercise the plans. You may have heard about Export Development Canada's exercise last week to test its pandemic plan; it was a headline in the national media. EDC took the exercise quite seriously, and some employees worked remotely from home while others showed up at the office. EDC wanted to make sure it could continue to provide its services to Canadian firms during a pandemic. The exercise demonstrated that it is positioned to do so.
Other departments and agencies are also testing their plans, with the same results, and where they identify deficiencies, they adjust their plans. That's why we encourage them to conduct those exercises.
These examples underscore the level of attention paid to pandemic preparedness in the federal government and the high degree of commitment to provide ongoing operations and deliver critical services to Canadians.
Thank you. I would be pleased to take questions at this time.