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Federal spending on ArriveCan to hit $54 million, double initial claim

Late last month, the Federal Government announced that it is dropping all COVID-19 border restrictions and making the ArriveCan app a non-mandatory tool for travellers.

Through a subsequent The Globe and Mail analysis, we now know that the Federal government wasted spent more than double on the app this year than it had initially said.

During the summer, The Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) provided media outlets with the total number of companies that received contracts connected to ArriveCan. According to the CBSA, only five companies had received contracts to work on the ArriveCan app in the year. Now, the CBSA has submitted a new document in Parliament that list 27 contracts involving 23 unique companies.

The total federal spending for the ArriveCan app is set to reach “in excess of $ 54 million” this year, with Ottawa-based GCstrategies having received the most federal work contracts for the application. Surprisingly, GCstrategies has less than five employees, and passes on most of the work to unnamed subcontractors.

IBISKA and Amazon Web Services were second and third, respectively, on the ‘Federal expenditure on contracts for work on the ArriveCan app’ list.

In reply to a Conservative MP request in the Parliament, the CBSA provided a spending report that indicated it had spent $19.7-million on developing the app and $4.9-million on app maintenance. The same figures were shared with media outlets in the summer when the CBSA had provided a list of companies that received contracts connected to ArriveCan. That totals $24.6 million. Additionally, in the CBSA’s written response to the Conservative MP, it added that there was an additional $4.9-million spent by the Public Health Agency of Canada for maintaining and promoting the application. That totals $29.5 million in spending for the app.

But wait, there’s more. The figures mentioned aren’t for all of 2022. They are for the fiscal year that ended on March 31st, 2022. Beginning April 1st, 2022, during the new fiscal year, an additional $25 million had been approved to be spent on the ArriveCan app, out of which roughly half or roughly $12.5 million has been spent so far. That totals $54.5 in total, out of which $42 million has already been spent.

Read the full report on CBSA’s excessive spending on the ArriveCan app here.

Mandatory use of the ArriveCan app ended on September 30th.

Header image credit: Shutterstock

Source: The Globe and Mail

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Mobile Syrup

Canada drops COVID-19 border restrictions, ArriveCAN no longer mandatory

More than two years after being implemented, Canada is ready to bid farewell to its COVID-19 border restrictions.

Several unnamed sources cited by media outlets in recent weeks suggested that the change was coming, and now, according to GlobalNews, the Liberal government has officially announced the changes.

The changes go into effect starting October 1st, and make it so that travellers, regardless of their citizenship, don’t have to provide proof of vaccination upon entry into the nation. Further, they don’t have to go through random COVID testing, quartine/isolate or use the ArriveCAN app. Notably, travellers won’t need to wear masks on planes and trains in the nation.

“The results of border tests carried about at the Public Health Agency (of Canada) over the past months have indicated that importations of COVID cases and its variant no longer influence in a significant way the evolution of the pandemic in Canada,” Jean-Yves Duclos, Health Minister, told reporters at a news conference, via Global News. “The higher level of cases of hospitalizations in Canada are largely explained by the domestic transmission of the virus and the rate of vaccination today.”

Lower death rates, high vaccination numbers, alongside the availability of booster doses, rapid tests, and treatments for COVID-19, aided the government in making the decision.

Although mask requirements have been lifted, travellers are still recommended to wear a mask to protect themselves. Furthermore, if required, the government can reinstate the border restrictions in the future, depending on new data or if a new foreign COVID variant appears.

Image credit: Shutterstock

Source: Global News