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Emergency alert system not good enough, says Bill Blair

Canada's emergency alert system is not working well enough when disaster strikes, Minister of Emergency Preparedness Bill Blair said Friday.

Minister of Emergency Preparedness says people need to get information about what to do sooner

Federal Minister of Emergency Preparedness Bill Blair said Friday that emergency alerts ahead of natural disasters need to be more timely and informative. (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press)

Canada's emergency alert system is not working well enough when disaster strikes, Minister of Emergency Preparedness Bill Blair said Friday.

Speaking to reporters at theGlobal Platform for Disaster Risk Reduction in Bali, Indonesia, Blair conceded that information alerts sent out ahead of a sudden, severe storm that hit southern Ontario and Quebec recently weren't as helpful as they could have been.

He didn't mince words when asked if the early warning system worked as well as it could have ahead of the storm.

"The very simple and straightforward answer is no. I think there needsto be improvements," Blair said.

He said alerts need to be sent out sooner, should offer more and better information about what recipients should doand should be more consistent in terms ofwho gets them.

Residents have criticized system

The May 21 storm and its aftermath killed 11 people in Ontario. Many in the Ottawa area are still without power.

Some residents have criticized the alert system, saying they didn't receive a warning when they felt they should have. Alerts were sent to cell phones and were also broadcast on TV and radio in some areas. It was the first broadcast intrusive alert for an extremethunderstorm warning.

Blair acknowledged the criticism, calling the early warning system "inconsistently utilized."

He said one of the most important things he learned at the conference is that there's data to suggest a strong early warning system for natural disasters can reduce casualties and damageby 30 per cent on average.

He said the federal government will be working with the provinces and territories and Environment Canada to make changes to the system.

"It's not just the right thing to do, it's the smart thing to do," he said.

"Clearly, I think the tragic loss of life, and the damage that occurred in Ontario and Quebec over the past several days, demonstrates that there is still more work to do, and we're committed to doing that work."

Feds offer to assist Ontario, Quebec

Blair's remarks comeas officialswarn of a risk of flooding inGatineau, Que. Blair said he's been briefed on the situationand thatfederal government officials arecommunicating with provincial counterparts.

He added that the federal government has offered aid to Ontario to help with recovery from the storm, but the province has not taken up the offeryet.

"We have offered assistance as required, but we have been advised, by the province, that the current response to the damage that was caused by the storms over the past two daysis within their capacity to manage," Blair said.

"We're working very closely with the provinces and local authorities, and we've provided them with assurances that if they require our assistance we'll be there to help."

He said the federal government is also prepared to step up with financial aidthrough theDisaster Financial Assistance Arrangements (DFAA)if Ontario and Quebec request it.

But in an interview airing Saturday on CBC'sThe House,Blair saidthe program is getting more costly.

Of an estimated$9 billion-plus in damages caused by floodingin British Columbia last year, Blair said, the federal government covered about $5 billion.

Hay bales float in the middle of a street surrounded by floodwaters in the Sumas Prairie flood zone in Abbotsford, B.C., on Monday, November 22, 2021. Emergency Preparedness Minister Bill Blair told CBC's The House in an interview airing Saturday that the federal government assumed most of the $9 billion-plus in recovery costs. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

"One of the problems that we run into inthe federal government is the Disaster Financial Assistance Arrangements, and we are seeing that the cost of that has been increasing quite significantly," Blair told host Chris Hall.

"So earlier this year, I set up an expert panel to start looking at that arrangementnot to reduce the amount of money that we spend, but to start spending it smarter and start investing in prevention, mitigation and adaptation, so that we can reduce the cost of the damage that's beingdone."

Blair added that the government could do more to provideuseful information to Canadians on responding to disasters.

"In May, we hadthe Emergency Preparedness Week, and we made an effort to put information out into our communities. And there was actuallythis year a pretty strong uptakefrom the public about being better prepared for emergencies, the development of emergency preparedness kits," he said.

"When people get that information and they know what to do, then then they can be safer and they can significantly reduce casualties and the damagethat's caused by these events."

Corrections

  • A previous version of this story identified Bill Blair as minister of public safety and emergency preparedness. In fact, he is currently only minister of emergency preparedness.
    May 28, 2022 12:37 AM ET