National Post

PM’S ‘minister of vaccines’ predicts more mandates are coming

- STEVE SCHERER

ST. JOHN’S • More Canadian businesses will introduce COVID-19 vaccine mandates for employees to safely return to the office amid a growing fourth wave, the minister in charge of procuring inoculatio­ns said in an interview.

Canada’s five biggest banks last week said they would require employees working from their offices to be fully inoculated and some large Canadian businesses, including Shopify Inc and Sun Life Financial, have done the same.

Though hospitals some universiti­es and even the Toronto police force are introducin­g mandates, many other companies have so far held off, or are not planning on requiring vaccinatio­ns, citing concerns over legal challenges.

Anita Anand, who Liberal Prime Minister Justin Trudeau calls his “minister of vaccines,” predicts more mandates are coming and said, in the end, the courts will rule that the pandemic was “a justifiabl­e reason” for imposing them.

“This is just the beginning of what we are going to see going forward with large and small companies who want to get back to business as usual,” Anand said in an interview after accompanyi­ng Trudeau to a rally in Newfoundla­nd late Monday.

“We are going to see ... public organizati­ons and companies, private companies, pension funds and other organizati­ons, including nonprofits, going forward with some sort of mandatory vaccinatio­n policy.”

Despite 74 per cent of Canadian residents getting at least one dose of a vaccine, cases have surged over the past three weeks due to the highly contagious Delta variant, according to a Reuters tally.

Two days before calling a snap Sept. 20 vote, Trudeau mandated vaccinatio­ns for federal employees and domestic air and train travellers, thrusting the issue to the forefront of his election bid.

There has been pushback. The largest union representi­ng federal workers said the move should not be punitive and that accommodat­ions like regular testing should be made, and Conservati­ve Party Leader Erin O’toole has advocated for a similar compromise.

The Toronto Police Associatio­n, a union representi­ng 8,000 uniformed and civilian members of the police service, said it disagreed with the mandate.

But more than 80 per cent of Canadians said they supported Trudeau’s vaccine mandates and would back them for health-care workers and teachers as well, according to an Ipsos poll published on Aug. 19. Some 72 per cent support vaccine passports for restaurant­s, gyms and other indoor spaces, a policy adopted in Quebec.

On Wednesday, the Toronto Blue Jays said they would require fans to be fully vaccinated or have a recent negative test to attend games at the ballpark from Sept. 13.

Several pension funds contacted by Reuters said they were still mulling what measures to take to bring people back to their offices, including the Public Sector Pension Investment Board (PSP), Alberta Investment Management Corporatio­n, British Columbia Investment Management Corporatio­n, and Optrust.

But Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec (CDPQ), the country’s second biggest pension fund, ruled out a mandate.

“We strongly and openly encourage our employees to get vaccinated, but we can’t force them, legally, to do so — or even ask them for that matter, whether they will get vaccinated or if they are,” said a spokesman for Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec (CDPQ).

Anand, who was a professor of corporate and securities law at the University of Toronto for 25 years before entering politics, said the safety of the workforce would outweigh concerns over individual privacy rights.

“This is one sort of instance where the safety of the collectivi­ty, and the society at large, is so important... courts are going to see this as being a justifiabl­e reason to collect data.”

 ?? POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES ?? Canada’s Minister of Public Services and Procuremen­t Anita Anand expects that more and more businesses and
organizati­ons will go forward with some type of mandatory vaccinatio­n policy.
POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES Canada’s Minister of Public Services and Procuremen­t Anita Anand expects that more and more businesses and organizati­ons will go forward with some type of mandatory vaccinatio­n policy.

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