
'Why do I feel so guilty?': Saskatchewan residents sending rapid tests out of province
CBC
Troy Weppler says he turned away from a post office employee in Saskatoon as he shoved a box of COVID-19 rapid tests into an envelope to send to family in British Columbia.
"Why do I feel so guilty about doing this? Am I breaking any laws or is it just an ethical thing?" Weppler said as he recalled the moment during the holiday season when he felt like an outlaw.
"Everywhere I go I'm getting tests thrown at me, so why can't I throw a couple in an envelope and mail them out to family?"
Weppler is not the only person in Saskatchewan fielding family requests from across the country for the much sought-after tests. Walk into libraries, fire halls and some grocery stores in the province and a smiling worker is likely to offer a kit with five tests.
Weppler was given his first box weeks ago when he went to cash in a lottery ticket. The employee told him he'd won $20 and a free play, then handed him the kit.
It's puzzling for most people elsewhere in Canada, where the demand for tests vastly outweighs supply. Federal Conservative Leader Erin O'Toole compared the situation to the Hunger Games movies earlier this week.
Federal Health Minister Jean-Yves Duclos has said that 140 million tests are to be distributed to provinces and territories on a per-capita basis this month. He said that would allow every Canadian to have one test per week in January.
Many are wondering if the uptick in supply will make a difference in being able to find rapid tests, since each province has distributed them differently so far.
Ontario's pop-up model for rapid tests has been widely criticized. British Columbia's provincial health officer, Dr. Bonnie Henry, had to assure residents earlier this week that tests were not being hoarded after growing public frustration.
The demand has only grown with the fast-spreading Omicron variant and with many provinces limiting the standard molecular lab tests to certain groups.
"Why can they get them in ... grocery stores in Saskatchewan and why can't you get them here?" Scott Forbes asked.
The University of Winnipeg biology professor has a son who lives in Moose Jaw, Sask. He came home for the holiday season and was having some light cold symptoms, Forbes said.
Forbes said his son went to get a lab test in Winnipeg and waited in line for more than four hours. The family had heard that the results could be delayed by up to a week. Rapid tests were nowhere to be found.
"He knew he wouldn't get the test results for awhile ... so he called his girlfriend to ship out some rapid tests from Moose Jaw." Forbes said.