Trudeau confirms Manitoba will get extra vaccine doses for Indigenous population, premier's office says
Federal health official said Wednesday distribution to provinces will be on per capita basis
Premier Brian Pallister's office says the prime minister backs up an assertion that Manitoba will receiveextra dosesof the COVID-19 vaccine from Moderna because ofthehighproportion of Indigenous people in the province.
A provincial spokesperson says the prime minister's confirmation cameThursdayat the meeting between Canada'spremiers and Justin Trudeau.
"Prior to that,following repeated queries from the province, federal officials from Health Canada, [Public Health Agency of Canada], and Intergovernmental Affairs confirmed to Manitoba officials on Monday evening we were receiving more than our per capita share," the province said by email.
On Tuesday, Pallister said he had confirmation from Ottawa that Manitoba will receive 15 per cent more doses of the yet-to-be-approved Moderna vaccine than it was originally scheduled to get under the federal government's distribution plan.
That plan will see each province receive vaccine doses in numbers proportionate to its share of the population.
Pallister said Manitoba would receive more doses of the Moderna vaccine because the provincehas a comparatively high Indigenous population, and vaccine priority is given to some at-risk populationsincludingadults living on Indigenous communities.
But on Wednesday, Ottawa cast doubt on Pallister's assertion, when a senior health official said nospecial allowances were made for individualprovinces.
"It's for certain we've had active discussions [with the provinces]," Dr. Howard Njoo,Canada's deputy chief public health officer, said at a technical briefing.
"People could quibble and say 'I think that if I look at the census data, I've got more seniors,older people in my province, or maybe I've gota greater number of health-care workers.'
"But at the end of the day, I think it all evens out and I think weall agreed that we're going with a per capita sort of allocation."
Pallister, though, held to his position Thursday, addinghefought at the first ministers' meeting to ensureFirst Nations people who don't live on reserve get the samepriority vaccine access tothose livinginIndigenous communities.
"While we succeeded previously in securing additional vaccine allocation for remote and isolated communities in Manitoba, the prime minister did not confirm that this would extend to Manitoba's very large off-reserve population," he said by email.
The federal government did not respond Thursday to CBC News' request for comment.
Backlash over 'back of the line' comments
TheModerna vaccine will be sent to isolated First Nations, since it does not need to be stored attemperatures as frigid as the Pfizer-BioNTechvaccine.
Pallister wasaccused last week of dividing Manitobansfor saying that reserving vaccinations for people on First Nations leavesotherManitobans"at the back of the line."
ManitobaLiberal Leader Dougald Lamont says the premier is now trying to distract from those remarks by taking creditfor an increase in vaccine allotments.
"I checked with some people in the federal government," he said, who told him any promise of extra vaccine doses"had nothing to do withany provincial negotiation."
Indigenous leaders, meanwhile, saythey'd rather focus on getting vaccines into the arms of their community members.
"It's not so much a political word game for me and our First Nations,"Manitoba Keewatinowi Okimakanak Grand Chief Garrison Settee said.
"It's a matter of getting the help that is so much needed in our north."
He said the need for vaccinations extends off reserve as well, an opinion echoed byAssembly of Manitoba Chiefs Grand ChiefArlen Dumas.
"COVID is not discriminating. Everybody's vulnerable to it. And it's affecting all of our communities it's affecting our off-reserve members just as much as it's affecting our on-reserve members," he said.