Quebec Public Health scrambled to justify 2nd curfew hours before announcement
CBC
Hours before Quebec announced the reinstatement of a provincewide curfew in December, which began the next day, emails obtained by Radio-Canada reveal the province's head of public health was still looking for studies to justify the decision.
In an email timestamped 10:31 a.m. on Dec. 30, the assistant to former public health director Dr. Horacio Arruda solicited help from the province's public health institute as well as a senior strategic medical advisor for Quebec Public Health to rationalize the curfew to reporters at a news conference later that day.
"Horacio would like you and your teams (!) to provide him with an argument in relation to the curfew in anticipation of questions from journalists at the 5 p.m. press conference this evening," wrote Renée Levaque.
"1) What are the studies? 2) What is being done elsewhere?" the email reads, adding Arruda wanted it "all in a tight argument."
At 2:36 p.m., less than three hours before the news conference, Éric Litvak, vice-president of scientific affairs at the Institut national de santé publique du Québec (INSPQ), replied that the request was impossible to fulfil.
"On the INSPQ side, we don't have an existing analysis that specifically addresses the curfew and we are unfortunately unable to produce one today with such short notice," he wrote in an email.
However, Litvak sent over material that he had used to back the suggestion of the first curfew, imposed in January 2021.
This material was sent to journalists in a news release by the Health Ministry on Dec. 30, claiming the decision to reinstate the curfew on Dec. 31 was backed by science. It shared three preliminary studies examining the effects of curfews in France, Jordan and Quebec, which were later criticized by experts.
The Health Ministry declined CBC's request for an interview with Arruda.
In January, Radio-Canada questioned the Health Ministry under the Act respecting Access to documents about what it had used to evaluate the restrictive measure in order to determine it was effective in slowing the spread of the virus.
On Feb. 7, the ministry responded that its mission "is not to do scientific research or to improve a legal argument."
"The decisions adopted are based on evidence gathered by various organizations, including the INSPQ and the opinion of experts from other organizations."
However, in response to another request, the INSPQ stated that it had "no documents" proving the efficacy of the curfew.
In January, Quebec's three main opposition parties all criticized the provincial government's decision to impose the curfew, arguing the health order was a sign of the government's failure to prepare.