Penticton Herald

Canadians maintain trust in doctors, science

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OTTAWA — Canadians appear to still have solid faith in doctors and scientists nearly six months into the COVID-19 pandemic, but opinions of educators have not fared so well.

A new survey done for Proof Strategies over the Labour Day weekend suggests more than eight in 10 Canadians trust doctors and nearly eight in 10 trust scientists.

That shows little change from the levels of trust recorded in a similar survey from the beginning of May, and remains higher than the levels recorded by the same survey taken in January.

“We just don’t get that level of trust for any other people,” said Bruce MacLellan, CEO of Proof Strategies.

The survey was done by The Logit Group, interviewi­ng 1,000 people from a panel of volunteers.

The polling industry’s profession­al body, the Marketing Research and Intelligen­ce Associatio­n, says online surveys cannot be assigned a margin of error as they are not random and therefore are not necessaril­y representa­tive of the whole population.

The interviews were conducted Sept. 3-5, just as many parents across the country were preparing to send their kids back to school for the first time since March, after several weeks of delayed starts, changes of plans, confusion and concern about class sizes and health protection­s.

MacLellan said it’s probably not surprising that Canadians seem to be losing faith in educators. In January, 65 per cent people surveyed said they trusted educators. In May, about six weeks after lockdowns began and most schools closed across Canada, that had fallen to 59 per cent and over the weekend, it fell to 51 per cent.

MacLellan said this is likely not directed only at teachers, but at all those involved in the education system, including government­s, school boards and union leaders.

“There has been a lot of arguing and uncertaint­y,” he said. “There is a widespread concern that there wasn’t enough planning done and there wasn’t enough health considerat­ion about how to operate the schools.”

Provincial premiers appeared to earn more trust from their constituen­ts than they did before the pandemic, going from 34 per cent in January, to 37 per cent in May and then 44 per cent in September. MacLellan said many premiers were often seen working in lockstep with the scientists and public health doctors Canadians put a lot of trust in, which likely is boosting the premiers’ numbers.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, however, who spent the summer defending his ethics, did not get the same boost. In May the percentage of people who said they trusted the prime minister was 39 per cent. On the weekend, that number was 32 per cent.

“There’s no question that seven points is significan­t,” said MacLellan.

Trudeau is being investigat­ed by the ethics commission­er to see if he violated the rules when he did not recuse himself from a cabinet decision to award WE Charity a contract to administer a multimilli­on-dollar student grant program.

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