Calgary Herald

Digital superclust­er projects target pandemic solutions

- MURAD HEMMADI

The federally backed Digital Technology Superclust­er on Thursday unveiled eight new initiative­s from its $60-million COVID-19 program, including a new system for local authoritie­s to model the impacts of reopening as well as platforms for virtual mental health, addiction treatment and telework for youth and health-care workers.

One of the Liberal government’s flagship programs, the five superclust­ers are consortia of startups, big businesses, academia and government agencies. As umbrella organizati­ons they select projects for funding, with a focus on research and commercial­ization of new products. In March, the feds tasked them to work on pandemic solutions; the digital superclust­er has taken “an even more significan­t focus on health-related issues coming at us as a result of COVID-19,” CEO Sue Paish told The Logic.

The federal government is giving the digital superclust­er $153 million, and expects it to increase GDP by over $5 billion and create more than 13,500 jobs over a decade, though some experts have questioned its impact projection­s.

The Vancouver-based non-profit has allocated $30.3 million to COVID-19 projects so far, with participat­ing organizati­ons — which include the likes of quantum computing firm 1Qbit, the University of British Columbia, Microsoft, pharmaceut­ical giant Bayer and health software startup Alayacare — putting up another $29 million.

In one initiative announced Thursday, Vancouver-based Thrive Health is working with Providence Health Care, a B.C. hospital network, to offer appbased mental-health and substance-abuse support to youth in programs run by Foundry, a B.C. government-backed care organizati­on. The platform will support video and messaging consultati­ons with doctors, counsellor­s and peer-support workers, and users will also be able to maintain and access their medical records. “It’s not just a standalone Skype call that doesn’t allow any continuity with the rest of the experience,” said Thrive CEO David Helliwell.

Helliwell co-founded the firm in 2016 to design better software to help patients through specialist care, including intake forms, surveys and medical histories. Demand for its products has spiked during the pandemic, and Thrive has also built COVID-19 self-assessment and education apps for the federal and B.C. government­s.

The company has existing partnershi­ps with Providence and Foundry; the new app is “something that (Thrive has) been talking about for a while, but didn’t have the bandwidth to actually do,” Helliwell told The Logic. Victoria-based developmen­t firm Freshworks Studio will adapt Thrive’s platform for the superclust­er project, with a final version scheduled for early 2021. “With all the other things going on right now, it saves us a year or two for time to market,” said Helliwell, who is looking to add 20 new hires to his staff of 60.

COVID -19 program participan­ts are retaining and recruiting employees to work on their projects, according to Paish. “We are still very much on track for our 10-year outcome with our jobs numbers,” she said. Some projects also aim to mitigate the economic effects of the pandemic, which has put millions out of work.

Kingston, Ont.-based Kings Distribute­d Systems is spearheadi­ng Looking Glass, a platform that will use survey and public government data to model various reopening scenarios. “We can predict the outcome of a fast return (for) a particular part of our society as compared to a slower return, and this will help policy-makers … plan the future weeks and months,” said Paish. Municipali­ties in B.C., Saskatchew­an, Ontario and Newfoundla­nd and Labrador will provide feedback during trials, which are scheduled to begin “within six months.”

The feds have faced scrutiny over the speed of its funding rollout for the superclust­ers. In March, The Globe and Mail reported Innovation, Science and Economic Developmen­t Canada spent just $5.6 million of the $244 million it planned for the 2018–19 fiscal year.

But Paish said the digital superclust­er had no difficulty getting going. The organizati­on launched its first call for projects in April 2018, even before it had signed a contributi­on agreement with the feds, and was the first of the five to announce projects in March 2019. “Our superclust­er has been going at a very fast pace from the outset,” said Paish. “COVID has really just accelerate­d everything.”

In early March, the digital superclust­er selected seven projects worth $45.8 million out of 22 proposals in its third cycle, but held off on unveiling them as the outbreak accelerate­d; it had announced 21 other initiative­s pre-pandemic, allocating $43.6 million of its own funding in total.

Paish said the government didn’t provide much direction for the programs, beyond asking that the organizati­ons focus on the outbreak. For more news about the innovation economy, visit www.thelogic.co

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 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Virtual mental health and telework projects are examples of new initiative­s.
THE CANADIAN PRESS Virtual mental health and telework projects are examples of new initiative­s.
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