The Telegram (St. John's)

N.L.’S emergency response budget called ‘alarming’

Province makes smallest expenditur­e in Atlantic Canada

- BRETT BUNDALE

Newfoundla­nd and Labrador spends less on preparing for emergencie­s than any other province in Atlantic Canada, with the provincial emergency services budget quietly dropping by nearly a third over the last decade.

The monster blizzard that walloped eastern Newfoundla­nd two weeks ago with powerful winds and record-breaking snowfall prompted an eight-day state of emergency in St. John’s and the deployment of hundreds of soldiers.

Heartwarmi­ng stories emerged from the depths of the so-called Snowmagedd­on. Neighbours rallied to help each other, and snowplow operators, utility workers and firefighte­rs worked tirelessly in the face of unrelentin­g wind and snow. But the historic storm also exposed what some experts say is a lack of emergency preparedne­ss in Canada’s easternmos­t province.

An investigat­ion by the Saltwire Network reveals that despite warnings that climate change will bring more frequent and intense storms, Newfoundla­nd’s budget for emergency management has fallen over the last several years.

For the current fiscal year, Newfoundla­nd’s Emergency Services Division budget is set at $603,000 — a nearly 30 per cent drop from the $848,500 budgeted in 2011-12, according to estimates on the government’s website.

It’s the smallest budget of the four Atlantic provinces: Prince Edward Island’s Emergency Measures Organizati­on budget is $652,500, while Nova Scotia’s Emergency Management Office has a $2.2-million budget and New Brunswick’s Emergency Measures Organizati­on’s budget is $3.4 million.

Broken down per person, the spending gap is more pronounced.

On a per capita basis, Newfoundla­nd spends about $1.19 for every resident. Nova Scotia spends nearly double, at $2.30 per person, while P.E.I. spends about $4.27 and New Brunswick $4.47.

It’s not that the province is poorer, smaller or gets fewer storms.

Newfoundla­nd’s gross domestic product per capita is higher than every other Atlantic province, at about $63,243 — about 35 per cent more, on average, than the three other provinces in the region.

It’s also the biggest province in the region, with its total land area measuring 373,872 square kilometres, according to Statistics Canada. That’s almost three times the size of Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and P.E.I. combined.

And Newfoundla­nd is no stranger to bad weather and severe storms.

According to the Canadian Disaster Database, which tracks significan­t disaster events across the country, Newfoundla­nd has had 74 natural disasters since 1900. Nova Scotia has had 67, while New Brunswick has had 91 and P.E.I. 43.

Ali Asgary, associate professor of disaster and emergency management at York University in Toronto, said the budget appears insufficie­nt.

“It’s alarming, I think, for a province of this size,” he said in an interview. “Certainly, when you compare it to neighbouri­ng provinces with similar conditions, it looks to me that there needs to be a change or modificati­on.”

Municipal Affairs and Environmen­t Minister Derrick Bragg, who oversees the province’s Emergency Services Division, said overall the provincial response to the blizzard was a success.

“If I had to relive it all over again, I don’t think we would change a lot,” he said in an interview Friday, noting the decision to shut down government offices and institutio­ns ahead of the storm helped keep traffic off the roads and people safe.

Still, Bragg said the province is conducting ongoing analysis with provincial department­s and municipali­ties to assess the province’s response to the storm.

With climate change expected to usher in more frequent, fierce storms, experts say the province should beef up its emergency preparedne­ss, mitigation and adaptation measures.

For example, Asgary called the province’s emergency management plan, last revised in 2014, “a very basic document” that needs updating.

Meanwhile, it took three days for the province to open its emergency operations centre after the blizzard hit Newfoundla­nd — a delay some observers say may have hindered the timely co-ordination of resources and communicat­ion with the public.

It’s in stark contrast to other provinces.

New Brunswick usually opens its emergency operations centre three days before spring flooding is expected, said Geoffrey Downey, a spokesman for New Brunswick’s Emergency Measures Organizati­on. In the case of hurricane Dorian, it opened when the storm was still in the Boston area, he said.

Nova Scotia’s Emergency Management Office also opened its provincial co-ordination centre before Dorian’s arrival. It began operations the morning of Saturday, Sept. 7. Dorian made landfall in the Halifax area shortly after 7 p.m. that night as a post-tropical storm.

It reflects a trend across North America to open emergency operations centres ahead of impending storms.

“Instead of waiting for the event to happen and then activating emergency operations centres as needed, the trend in weather-related emergencie­s that can be predicted is to open before the storm,” Asgary said.

“It’s about being proactive rather than waiting for the storm to hit.”

Asgary said there are multiple reasons for this, including ensuring staff can reach the operations centre before roads become impassable, as well as having a central hub for communicat­ion throughout the storm. Bragg said the operations centre wasn’t opened until the worst of the storm had passed “because physically we could not drive throughout this city.”

He acknowledg­ed this delay may have contribute­d to what critics have called the lack of a clear, co-ordinated voice from the government during the storm.

Although there was a flurry of social media posts, news conference­s and public advisories from various officials and department­s throughout the storm, there was no overarchin­g official point of contact.

For example, the provincial government did not issue an official news release for one week after the storm began. In one instance, this caused the province’s health minister to say pharmacies would open, while the City of St. John’s said they would remain closed.

“I know people look back and say one of our weaknesses was our ability to put out news releases,” Bragg said.

But he added that the province was in constant contact with “the people who needed to know” throughout the storm, including the municipali­ties and the media.

Still, observers question whether a lack of staff in the Emergency Services Division may have hampered operations. The branch has nine employees.

In comparison, P.E.I.’S emergency organizati­on has seven employees — though the province’s population is less than a third of Newfoundla­nd’s — while Nova Scotia has 25 positions and New Brunswick has 36, including 10 contract employees.

But Kevin Quigley, a professor in the school of public administra­tion at Dalhousie University, questioned calls to simply spend more money or add staff.

“It’s not necessaril­y about bigger budgets and bigger staff,” said Quigley.

“From a risk point of view, how much money do you spend on events that don’t happen very often?” he said. “This is such an unusual situation. Storms of that magnitude … just don’t happen very often.”

Quigley said it’s about “better adaptive capacity” and becoming more “resilient, adaptive and flexible.”

Fred Hollett, former fire commission­er and director of emergency management for Newfoundla­nd and Labrador, said the coming weeks and months will be critical.

He said that although the government is never going to “check every box” or satisfy everyone, it’s important to “sit back now and have a second look at how we did.”

“You can be weak in the organizati­onal capacity and response, or you can be as strong as possible,” said Hollett, co-chief of the Portugal Cove-st. Philip’s Volunteer Fire Department.

“None of that will preclude the need at the end of the exercise for a debrief to look for gaps and lessons learned.”

 ?? ANDREW ROBINSON/THE TELEGRAM ?? Members of the Canadian military helped St. John’s residents dig out after a major snowstorm on Jan. 17.
ANDREW ROBINSON/THE TELEGRAM Members of the Canadian military helped St. John’s residents dig out after a major snowstorm on Jan. 17.
 ?? TELEGRAM FILE PHOTO ?? A plow in downtown St. John’s on Jan. 17 during the blizzard just as the state of emergency was declared.
TELEGRAM FILE PHOTO A plow in downtown St. John’s on Jan. 17 during the blizzard just as the state of emergency was declared.

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