Toronto Star

Government to develop vaccine passport in house

The province says the ‘made in Ontario’ app will be ready for release by Oct. 22

- OMAR MOSLEH STAFF REPORTER

The Ontario government has told the Star it will take a different approach than other provinces in developing its mobile app for COVID-19 vaccine certificat­ion, opting to build the program in house instead of contractin­g it out to a tech company.

It’s an approach that one tech expert characteri­zed as “messy” — suggesting the provincial government planned the process hastily, and that it might be cheaper and faster to contract the app out to a private company or go with a web-based QR code system instead.

The developmen­t of the “made in Ontario” app is being led by the government’s Ontario Digital Service in consultati­on with the private sector, and the government has said it will be ready for release by Oct. 22. It is not clear how far along the developmen­t of the Ontario app is, but the CEO of Akinox, the company that developed the VaxiCode system in Quebec, said developmen­t of his company’s app took about four months.

“We are leveraging in-house capabiliti­es and talent while also engaging with other jurisdicti­ons and private sector companies, including those based in Ontario, to learn from their work and experience­s,” said Amanda Brodhagen, a spokespers­on for the associate minister of digital government. “We are able to leverage user experience and design, while developing our own made in Ontario app.”

Richard Hyatt, a technology entreprene­ur and CEO of QR code developmen­t company Candr, is skeptical of the government’s plans to develop the app internally. His company has already developed a web-based passport system

that allows people to upload their current Ontario vaccine receipt and create a secure QR code that is stored on the user’s device, but not on the company’s internal system.

Based on how the announceme­nt for a vaccinatio­n verificati­on process has rolled out in Ontario, he said he has doubts the government has put much time into it.

Ontario Premier Doug Ford had

previously argued that a vaccine certificat­e was not necessary for Ontario and that the vaccine receipt was sufficient. Ford announced the policy change last week.

“I think their strategy is really messy … I don’t think this was part of this strategy,” Hyatt said. “I think it was an, ‘OK we’ve got egg on our face, we need to backtrack.’ And it’s not the first time the Ford government has done this.”

He expects Ontario’s app to be modelled on the one already released in Quebec and says it may have made more sense to contract it out.

“Their costs are going to be a lot different and they may not have the same skills that the private sector has … I think they could pull something off; I don’t think they’re going to pull off something spectacula­r,” Hyatt said.

Brodhagen said Ontario has been in regular meetings with other jurisdicti­ons on the need to standardiz­e ways to securely and privately share vaccinatio­n status, but Quebec’s app was “purpose-built for Quebec and would require customizat­ion and procuremen­t for Ontario’s needs.”

Joshua S. Gans, a digital strategist and professor of strategic management at the University of Toronto’s Rotman School of Management, said he doesn’t see issues with Ontario developing the app, noting that similar apps are being developed around the world for this purpose.

“It’s easy to make an app. The hard thing is to link it in with the official system in a private and secure way,” Gans said.

Having said that, he acknowledg­ed there could be “wrinkles and other things that might not work properly” if the app is developed and released too quickly, but this will likely be mitigated by the fact there is a prototype to replicate, he said.

“I doubt Ontario has such a different database and system for keeping those public records in the first place, that it would make it impossible to do this and require something completely different,” he said.

Alexander Dahl, CEO of Akinox, the company that developed the app in Quebec, said his company has had a number of exchanges with the Ontario Digital Service and Ministry of Health, but would not disclose if it is one of the private sector companies being consulted.

He said his company took about four months to develop the Quebec app from conception, developmen­t and analysis to testing — and it would be quite a feat if a government could develop its own from scratch within roughly six weeks.

“I would be concerned for those provinces that (intend) to build on their own … They may have started some of the work earlier so I can’t speculate on that,” Dahl said.

His recommenda­tion to the Ontario government is to not underestim­ate how much work may be needed to make the applicatio­n compatible across different devices with a simple and appealing user interface.

“There a lot of things that we often underestim­ate, how complex they can prove or how much effort might be required in getting something fit for such a wide range in use,” Dahl said.

The applicatio­n will also have to be updated and supported after its release. He noted his company had to update its applicatio­n after an IT specialist found a way to generate false proof of vaccinatio­n QR codes.

“That’s also something that government­s, typically, are not used to as much, managing apps; they’re used to managing websites … there’s definitely an adaptation or different ways of doing things that they’re not used to.”

Ontario is separately developing an enhanced vaccine certificat­e with a unique QR code, which is aimed at individual­s, as well as the mobile applicatio­n, which will allow businesses and other organizati­ons to scan the QR code and quickly validate if someone is immunized.

People will be able to either print their unique QR code or store it on their phone, to show alongside government-issued photo ID.

Different jurisdicti­ons are taking varying approaches. Quebec’s applicatio­n is available in two versions: one for people to store their unique QR code and another specifical­ly for businesses and other organizati­ons. In Manitoba, the immunizati­on card is available digitally, in an app and as a physical card, and there is a separate verificati­on app for organizati­ons and businesses to scan the code.

British Columbia has announced plans to launch a vaccine card website for its verificati­on process, which will include a card that can be saved to smartphone­s.

B.C. already has an app called the B.C. Services Card that stores medical informatio­n and it’s unclear if there are plans to release an app specific to COVID-19 shots.

People will be able to either print their unique QR code or store it on their phone, to show alongside government-issued photo ID

 ??  ?? Ontario’s vaccine passport app is expected to be modelled on the one already released in Quebec.
Ontario’s vaccine passport app is expected to be modelled on the one already released in Quebec.
 ?? GRAHAM HUGHES THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? A sign at a Montreal restaurant advises customers of Quebec’s vaccine passport on Monday. The Ford government says it plans on developing its own system in house, but one expert says it may have made more sense to contract the work out.
GRAHAM HUGHES THE CANADIAN PRESS A sign at a Montreal restaurant advises customers of Quebec’s vaccine passport on Monday. The Ford government says it plans on developing its own system in house, but one expert says it may have made more sense to contract the work out.

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