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103Pandemic
Data Sharing: How the Canadian Constitution Has Turned into a Suicide Pact
issue a regulation requiring provinces to share designated epide-
miological data, and to do so in a prescribed, secure electronic form,
which experts like Statistics Canada could build. S. 15 also helpfully
empowers Cabinet to craft bespoke protections for confidential or
personal health information, which is indispensable for critical life-
saving interventions such as cellphone-based contact tracing of per-
sons exposed to the COVID-19 virus, and in doing so Cabinet may
deviate from the Privacy
Act and the Personal Information Protection and
Electronic Documents Act.30
Alternatively, s. 13 of the Statistics Act permits the Chief
Statistician of Canada to issue a mandatory request for epidemiologi-
cal data to any “person having the custody or charge of any docu-
ments or records that are maintained in any department [including in
a province] or in any municipal office, corporation, business or orga-
nization.” While easier to use than s. 15 of the Public Health Agency of
Canada Act, this mechanism has the disadvantage that it only allows
existing data to be collected.
We recommend using both these statutory powers at once for
COVID-19. We further recommend for COVID-19 specifically that:
(i) any Cabinet regulation under s. 15 of the Public Health Agency
of Canada Act should concomitantly declare an emergency for the
duration of the pandemic under the federal Peace, Order, and Good
Government power (POGG) and the ratio in Re: Anti-Inflation Act;31
and (ii) that a province’s eligibility to receive billions of dollars of
emergency federal relief should be conditioned on furnishing epi-
demiological data per the ratio in Re: Canada Assistance Plan (B.C.).32
Supreme Court precedent leaves no doubt that both the POGG emer-
gency and federal spending power may be used to enforce compli-
ance with data sharing.
Taken together, these two statutory powers, reinforced by other
laws as we have just described, can:
• oblige provinces to hew to a single COVID-19 case definition
established by PHAC for statistical comparability;
• oblige provinces to report epidemiological data according to
a single method established by Statistics Canada;
30. See the derogations in the Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents
Act, SC 2000, c 5, ss 7(3)(c1)(iii), 7(3)(e); Privacy Act RSC 1985, c P-21, s 8(2).
31. [1976] 2 SCR 373, 68 DLR (3d) 452.
32. [1991] 2 SCR 525 at 567, 83 DLR (4th) 297.
VULNERABLE
The Law, Policy and Ethics of COVID-19
- Titel
- VULNERABLE
- Untertitel
- The Law, Policy and Ethics of COVID-19
- Autoren
- Vanessa MacDonnell
- Jane Philpott
- Sophie Thériault
- Sridhar Venkatapuram
- Verlag
- Ottawa Press
- Datum
- 2020
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
- ISBN
- 9780776636429
- Abmessungen
- 15.2 x 22.8 cm
- Seiten
- 648
- Kategorien
- Coronavirus
- International