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Alberta government names 5 new members to Preston Manning-led COVID review panel

The Alberta government has announced five members for former Reform Party Leader Preston Manning’s COVID-19 review panel, one of whom was recently fired along with the rest of the governing board of Alberta Health Services. Manning takes part in a panel discussion during a conference in Ottawa on Friday, May 6, 2022. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick

The Alberta government has named five members to a COVID-19 review panel led by former Reform Party leader Preston Manning, one of whom was recently fired along with the rest of the governing board of Alberta Health Services.

Jack Mintz joins Dr. Martha Fulford, Michel Kelly-Gagnon, Dr. Rob Tanguay and Jack Major on the Public Health Emergencies Governance Review panel.

“Albertans can have confidence Alberta’s pandemic response will be reviewed by these medical, policy, legal and economic experts so our province can better respond to the next public health emergency,” Smith said in a statement Friday.

Mintz is the president’s fellow at the University of Calgary’s School of Public Policy and advises and writes on tax, business and health policy.

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He and the board were fired by Smith in November. She said they failed Albertans during the pandemic by failing to scale up hospital capacity as promised, forcing the government to impose what Smith has termed freedom-busting health restrictions.

Click to play video: 'Concerns raised about Preston Manning’s role as chair of Alberta COVID panel'
Concerns raised about Preston Manning’s role as chair of Alberta COVID panel

The board members were replaced by an administrator. In an opinion piece published in the Financial Post in November, Mintz wrote that he was OK with the firing because the changes represent a necessary jump-start to achieve true reform in health-care delivery.

Major is a former Supreme Court judge and Kelly-Gagnon is president of the Montreal Economic Institute.

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Tanguay is a psychiatrist and University of Calgary professor focusing on disability and rehabilitation.

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Fulford is chief of medicine at McMaster University Medical Centre in Hamilton and focuses on infectious diseases. She challenged the efficacy of some health restrictions during the pandemic.

The panel is not only looking at government decision-making, but also its effects on jobs, children, mental health and protection of rights and freedoms. It is to report back by Nov. 15.

The bulk of the panel’s work will be reviewing legislation, regulations and ministerial orders, but it will also take feedback online.

The budget is $2 million. Manning, who was announced as chair a month ago, is to be paid $253,000.

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Manning and Smith have been critical of government-imposed health restrictions such as masking, gathering rules and vaccine mandates during the pandemic.

Smith has questioned the efficacy of the methods and their long-term effects on household incomes, the economy and mental health. She has promised health restrictions and vaccine mandates would have no role in any future COVID-19 response in Alberta.

The Opposition New Democrats have labelled the panel a political sop to Smith’s far-right supporters angry over COVID-19 restrictions.

“We certainly see some incredibly questionable choices here from Danielle Smith for what is frankly a sham of the panel,” Opposition health critic David Shepherd said.

He pointed to Fulford’s actions and words going back to the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic.

“She has previously called public health measures that were implemented in schools child abuse. She likened vaccination mandates to segregation. She was a participant in the convoy protests.

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“So it’s quite clear that we do not have an unbiased perspective being brought here,” Shepherd said. “They are interested in appointing people that are simply going to tell them what they already want to hear. They are looking for folks who already support the points of view that they want to put out.”

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The Edmonton-Centre MLA said the $2 million going to the panel would be better put towards strengthening the province’s health care system.

He repeated the Alberta NDP’s promise to cancel the panel should they win the May 29 provincial election.

–with files from Adam Toy, Global News

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