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Joanna Gray's avatar

I’m sure a lot of well-meaning bureaucrats sit down together at regular intervals to talk and produce thousands of pages of verbiage littered with phrases like “will work toward”, and “committed to” (my personal favourite), none of it helping to prepare for a real-time, large disaster. Look at the pandemic plan produced after SARS. I believe it was languishing on a shelf somewhere when Covid arrived, and was never looked at, let alone implemented. Look at the inventory of N95 masks that was allowed to expire. Look at the unbelievable clusterf**k that passed for interdepartmental and intergovernmental communication during the convoy “crisis”. I have absolutely NO faith that with our bloated bureaucracy, where no one can make a decision without passing the problem around until they don’t have to think about it anymore, and the stunning priorities of our government, where every decision has to be passed through the eye of the political expediency needle, we could handle a really bad disaster. Nope. I think we’re on our own folks.

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Musings From Ignored Canada's avatar

Municipalities - Allowing developers to build on flood plains (Brandon Manitoba) or a subdivision with only one road going in and out (Halifax NS)

Provinces - Not maintaining roads and bridges

Feds - Not having a national inventory (that is actually maintained) of assets to support Provinces and Territories.

Finally that the Feds shut down the Chilliwack Base (at the head of the Fraser Valley) which held a bulk of the Army's Combat Engineering equipment shows that it is totally unprepared for a major seismic event in the lower mainland. And no, the RCN in Esquimalt nor the RCAF in Comox will be able to help much.

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