


Health Canada is seeking a contractor to further develop its COVID-19 vaccine passport system and extend it to include other health data such as exemption and recovery credentials, according to a tender notice.
“In response to the COVID-19 outbreak, there has been a global effort to advance vaccines and therapeutics and develop public health digital solutions,” says the Statement of Work introducing the project issued by Public Services and Procurement Canada (PSPC).
“Canada’s ability to defeat COVID-19 depends greatly on assembling immunization data to guide key decision making throughout the pandemic.”
The solicitation for a contractor to build a “digital health tech platform” was posted in late November on the CanadaBuys website and bidding closed on Jan. 3.
The supplier has yet to be announced, but the current incumbent is Deloitte Inc., which was awarded a contract for $59 million spanning January 2021 to January 2023.
Bidding details made available by PSPC indicate the previous contract was for the development of the National Vaccine Management Information Platform (NVMIP), with the Canadian COVID-19 proof of vaccination credentials being delivered as part of it.
The Statement of Work for the current bid states that the Digital Transformation Branch (DTB) within Health Canada will “provide thought leadership in standards and solutions for Canadian health credentials for specific pan-Canadian initiatives.”
Those include “Proof of vaccination credentials (PVC), exemption credentials, test credentials, recovery credentials, conversion from one standard to another, support solutions to address immunization international interoperability, enhance connections to internal Health Canada systems, etc.”
Canadians are perhaps more familiar with the vaccine passports issued by provinces which were financed and encouraged by the Trudeau government.
The federal government also issues it own proof of vaccination for travel outside the country, according to the Health Canada website.
The Epoch Times contacted Health Canada to ask how many of these have been issued to date but no response was received before publication time.
Health Canada wants the new solutions developed to be geared for domestic uses and international travel.
In other words, the federal government has not abandoned the development of COVID-19 control measures, and new digital credentials could carry health information such as the existence of a previous infection to allow the user to access services in future scenarios.
The new contract also suggests the federal government intends to merge vaccine passports with digital ID.
The Statement of Work defines a digital health credential as an electronic document that details a “medical qualification, competence, health status, record” issued by a relevant authority.
“The credentials could include a verifiable digital identity of the issuer and the holder of the credential,” says the document.
The selected contractor’s role will be to develop new releases of the PVC and related technologies, and provide expertise on the design, implementation, and use of health credential technologies.
This seeks to “facilitate the Canadian health journey leveraging Digital Identity, new health standards and solutions, health Artificial intelligence, cloud and big data structure /architectures etc.”
Health Canada is pursuing this work at a time after all provinces and territories dropped vaccine passports last year, beginning shortly after the Freedom Convoy and other protests took the country by storm demanding the lifting of COVID-19 restrictions.
The federal government followed months later by lifting vaccine mandates in June and fully opening the border in October.
So what is the rationale behind this endeavour, at a time when life has mostly returned to normal, in Canada and across the globe?
For one, the World Health Organization (WHO) still believes that COVID-19 remains a “public health emergency.”
“The Government of Canada acknowledges the WHO Director General’s determination that COVID-19 remains a” public health emergency of international concern, wrote the Public Health Agency of Canada in a Jan. 30 statement.
WHO Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus made the announcement on Jan. 30 after receiving advice from the International Health Regulations Emergency Committee.
PHAC says that the SARS-CoV-2 virus that causes COVID-19 is still evolving and circulating widely in Canada and across the world.
Health Canada’s continued focus on COVID-19 takes many shapes in the information space and relies heavily on new technologies.
The Epoch Times previously reported it hired U.K. social media intelligence collection firm Pulsar Platform to gather information on the vaccine hesitant and related influencers in order to target them with tailored pro-vaccination messaging.
PHAC also had to suspend its attempt to hire a contractor to directly tap into communications tower to track the anonymized movements of Canadians, after it was revealed it had done so using third parties without the expressed consent of cellphone users.
The tracking of movement was used in part to assess the compliance with lockdown orders.
Health Canada is not the only department going full digital, with the Trudeau government announcing the launch of its digital identity program last August.
The government also subscribes to the World Economic Forum’s (WEF) vision to usher in a “Fourth Industrial Revolution.”
The WEF is a globalist organization of leaders in the fields of politics, industry, and activism which seeks to influence government and corporate governance.
Canada is a signatory of the WEF-sponsored Agile Nations Charter, which seeks to streamline regulations to allow the proliferation of new technologies like gene editing and digital ID.
Innovation Canada spearheads a project under that framework to test the use of digital credentials to obtain services, complete transactions, and cross borders, according to internal details revealed by the Treasury Board.
Transport Canada was also involved in another digital ID WEF initiative, the Known Traveller Digital Identity (KTDI).
The department says the project is now over and being closed-out, with new initiatives to be unveiled next spring.
The Dutch government, which was the other state entity involved in KTDI, told The Epoch Times it will conduct another digital ID project with Canada in the coming months.
The Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem also said in late 2022 that his organization would conduct consultations this year on the implementation of a central bank digital currency.
Critics of the widespread digitization fear it will usher in a social credit system like that seen under the dictatorship of the Chinese Communist Party, where everything is tracked and citizens can be denied services based on their opinions.
“In a best-case scenario, a digital ID will make your personal details and identity less confidential and secure,” Ontario Party Leader Derek Sloan told The Epoch Times in a previous interview.
“In a worst-case scenario, it can be used, as it is in communist China to control citizens’ movement and access to basic social services. It could even be used to control what you can buy or where you can go if used in conjunction with a vaccine passport or lockdown rules like we’ve seen in the past.”
Proponents like the Trudeau government say digital ID will facilitate access to services.
“Now more than ever, we have work to do to make it easier for Canadians to interact with the Government of Canada, and we are committed to better serving Canadians in a digital age,” Treasury Board President Mona Fortier said in announcing Canada’s digital strategy last August.
Rachel Emmanuel contributed to this report.