Ottawa Citizen

Vaccine card plan lacks flexibilit­y: B.C. groups

Doesn't account for those facing barriers, they say

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VANCOUVER • A group of British Columbia community organizati­ons wants changes to the province's COVID-19 vaccine card, saying it fails to account for the needs of people who face legitimate barriers to getting a vaccine or proof of immunizati­on.

A joint letter to Health Minister Adrian Dix and provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry says the plan could restrict access to services for people who can't get a shot for medical reasons, as well as people without government identifica­tion.

It was released by Vancouver-based Pivot Legal Society this month and says B.C. has failed to identify a workaround for people without ID, which could include women fleeing violence, people who are homeless and undocument­ed migrants.

The vaccine card system requires patrons to show proof of at least one vaccine dose by Monday and two doses by Oct. 24 to access certain indoor settings — including ticketed sports events, concerts, restaurant­s, gyms and movie theatres.

The card will not be required at grocery and liquor stores, pharmacies, fast food restaurant­s, salons, barbers, hotels, banks, retail stores, food banks and shelters.

B.C. residents need a personal health number to order a paper copy of their vaccine card or to download the card online for display on a smartphone. The card will be checked alongside government identifica­tion.

“If you're homeless and living outside, carrying around a piece of paper is just not going to work out,” said Rowan Burdge, director of the BC Poverty Reduction Coalition and a signatory of the letter. “We've seen encampment­s where people's belongings have been taken away.”

The letter says the province hasn't done enough to follow the advice of organizati­ons that understand how best to navigate public health guidelines for those living in poverty or with a disability, for example.

Disability Alliance BC, which also signed the letter, said in a separate statement that mandating so-called vaccine passports without accommodat­ing people who cannot get vaccinated due to their medical condition is “blatant discrimina­tion.”

The Health Ministry said in a statement it appreciate­s the groups' feedback and it has “been doing what we can to address some of these challenges.”

Asked about accommodat­ion for people who cannot get vaccinated for medical reasons, the ministry said there will be an exemption process “for extremely rare circumstan­ces.”

“Dr. Henry has said that if you are unvaccinat­ed, for whatever reason, these kind of indoor settings with lots of people are high-risk right now,” it said.

Ontario, Quebec and Manitoba have also introduced vaccine passport programs.

Burdge said she doesn't want requests made in the letter to be conflated with anti-vaccinatio­n rhetoric.

“We absolutely are supporting people to get vaccinated . ... But we're worried about the systemic barriers that are going to come from this particular policy.”

A number of B.C. communitie­s have seen protests against the vaccine card, including outside hospitals.

Dr. David Naylor, cochair of Canada's COVID-19 immunity task force, said there's a widespread sense that COVID-19 has “hijacked our lives,” leading some people to scapegoat the public health measures adopted to protect the health-care system and those who are too young to receive a vaccine.

But Naylor said those measures, including achieving a higher rate of vaccinatio­n, are the “only way to restore normalcy in the months ahead,” particular­ly as the highly contagious Delta variant makes up the majority of Canada's COVID-19 cases.

Vaccine passports have a role to play in curbing the fourth wave by encouragin­g immunizati­on among people who may be late getting their first shot, but who aren't staunchly opposed to vaccinatio­n, Naylor said.

Naylor led a review of Canada's public health system after the outbreak of SARS in 2003.

Those opposed to vaccinatio­n or vaccine cards are “simply inviting continuati­on of some of the measures that everyone would like to avoid,” he said in an interview.

WE'RE WORRIED ABOUT THE SYSTEMIC BARRIERS THAT ARE GOING TO COME.

 ?? DARRYL DYCK / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? A police officer directing traffic around the road closure stands by as people attend a recent rally and march organized by COVID-19 vaccinatio­n passport opponents.
DARRYL DYCK / THE CANADIAN PRESS A police officer directing traffic around the road closure stands by as people attend a recent rally and march organized by COVID-19 vaccinatio­n passport opponents.

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