Thanks, Sean.
Thanks to everyone for the time today. I have to admit that it's a bit odd to be the one presenting instead of the one asking questions, so bear with me.
This bill is really straightforward in many respects. We've all just lived through a devastating pandemic. It upended our lives in so many different ways. It has taken lives. It has damaged businesses. It has undermined livelihoods. It has upset schooling, and on and on and on.
We don't want to live through another one. There are a couple of things we need to do. One is to take every step we can to reduce the risk of a future pandemic, and there are steps we can take, working here domestically and working with international partners. We need to make sure that, when the next one comes, we are the best prepared for it.
I don't propose that I've managed to include every single thing that should be included in this piece of legislation, but the architecture is there. It's an accountability architecture that would require the government every three years—and you could consider changing it to five, but it would be on a regular basis—to say, “Here is our pandemic prevention and preparedness plan” and table it in Parliament. Parliamentarians from all parties, working with experts, could then hold the government to account on its plan.
Is enough being done? Can we take additional steps to reduce risk? What are other countries doing that we aren't doing? What's in their plan that isn't in ours?
It is essential that we have that ongoing accountability, because if you look at the experience with SARS, there was a review, there was a report and there were recommendations. Some were even acted on, but not all were. There wasn't a recurring accountability so it fell off the table. When we came to the COVID pandemic, we weren't as prepared as we ought to have been. Frankly, we didn't take the steps we could have taken to prevent COVID in the first place.
The architecture is there. I almost called it the “one health bill”. It's the pandemic prevention and preparedness act. I almost called it the one health bill because on the prevention side—and we already have a one health framework at Health Canada, working with agriculture—it is incredibly important that we keep in mind, we take to heart and we keep in this bill this idea. It's grounded in science, grounded in international bodies and grounded in science here in Canada that animal health, environmental health and human health are interconnected ideas.
If we don't have a clear-eyed focus on environmental health, that can impact animal health, which can then impact human health. It's especially important when you consider the particular risk posed by zoonosis. If you have other experts who testify in the course of these proceedings on Bill C-293, you will hear over and over again that the core primary risk of another pandemic is a zoonotic disease and spillover risk from animals.
That's on the prevention and one health side.
At a high level, I want to say there is a lot in this bill. I consulted with the United Nations Environment Programme's report about preventing future pandemics. I consulted with the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services' report about preventing future pandemics, including consulting with a Canadian expert involved in that report. I consulted with the independent panel, which has written reports on pandemic prevention and preparedness and worked directly with the researchers who wrote and put those reports together, and consulted with a range of other experts.
That's how this bill came to be.
Again, I don't propose that it's perfect, and I would expect amendments are going to be forthcoming. I want to say that amendments should be forthcoming.
For one, I know the review section in the bill has caused some consternation, because there is some question about whether it should be independent. My view has generally been that there should be some more fulsome, searching independent review. This review is more focused on informing the plan, but I don't want to get into the politics of it. I understand there's an agreement to remove that section of the bill, and I'm comfortable with that. That seems right by me in terms of the conversations that have been had.
The second piece is on specific language in the bill. I would say, in everything that you do, improve it, take certain language out if you don't like it and add other language in if there's language missing. At all times, my ask, and it's how I came to this legislation at all times, is to make sure that everything we do is going to put in place an architecture whereby a future government—this government, the next government and the government 20 or 50 years from now—is going to be required to turn its mind to certain issues that are core to pandemic prevention and preparedness, and follow the science.
I know I've received some questions. I engaged with the Ontario Federation of Agriculture, for example, on the agriculture amendments. They said it could perhaps be even tighter and more specific with the language. That's fair.
I would encourage all of you, as you look at amending the legislation—I know amendments will be warranted—to make sure that we, at all times, focus on what is best in the science when it comes to prevention and preparedness.
I appreciate the time, Sean.