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Unredacted document shows Montreal Public Health urged Quebec not to impose 2nd curfew

A document compiled by Montreal Public Health, dated 10 days before the Quebec government imposed a curfew again, was sent to theformer public health director outlining how the curfew had been detrimental, particularly to vulnerable populations.

Document outlined problems, recommended other measures instead

Dr. Mylne Drouin, left, public health director for Montreal, was opposed to the province's plan to impose a curfew late last year. Before it was announced, the former provincial public health director, Dr. Horacio Arruda, right, received a document compiled by Montreal Public Health outlining the problems that come with a curfew. (Radio-Canada)

Quebec's Health Ministry published an unredacted email exchange Thursday which shows theformer public health director recommended the reinstatement of theprovincewidecurfew despiteMontreal Public Health advising against the measure.

In an email timestamped 10:31 a.m. on Dec. 30, hours before the lastcurfew was announced, Dr. Horacio Arruda's assistant solicited help from the province's public health institute (INSPQ) to help justify a rule that would only be in place for two weeks ending soon after Arruda resigned.

In the email, Rene Levaque copy and pasted a lengthy document compiled by Montreal Public Health, dated Dec. 21and outlining how the measure does more harm than good.

An unredacted version of the email was published by Quebec's Ministry of Health on Thursday.

That document an ethical opinion outlines the many ways in which the curfew has proven detrimental, particularly to vulnerable populations such as those living with therisk of family violence, people of colour and immigrants.

The document says those with mental illness, the unhoused and people who use drugs are also put more at risk by curfews.

Radio-Canada first obtained a completely redactedversion (all of the text covered in black bars) of the document from the Health Ministryin response to a request under theAct respecting Access to documents held by public bodies.

'Lack of robust data'

The document states there is a "lack of robust data on the specific effectiveness of curfews."

The document says the curfew has even proven counterproductive in some cases as people gather indoors after hours to avoid getting a ticket. People may end up spending the night away from home rather than risk travelling, increasing the risk of transmission, the document says.

Among other things, the document citesthe death of a homeless man who was outside past curfew. Just days after his death, aQuebec Superior Court judge ruled that the order should not apply to people experiencing homelessness.

A curfew also reduces access to places where people can safely consume substances under supervision. It also accentuates social tensions and negative interactions between law enforcement and the public, the document says.

The document also notes the population is suffering from pandemic fatigue which elevates the importance of transparent and evidence-based decision-making to get the public onside.

The document compiled by Montreal Public Health was circulated internally, but the two pages of the document were initially completely redacted when provided to Radio-Canada. (Thomas Gerbet/Radio-Canada)

With the absence of data proving a curfew effective and the demonstration of collateral impacts, Montreal Public Health recommended that alternative measures be introduced instead.

The document says it would be better to "communicate clear instructions, to promote the isolation of cases and their contacts, maintain limited social bubbles, reduce gathering limits indoors, use masks appropriately, ensure adequate ventilation of closed spaces where several people at risk of infection meet, promote the correct use of self-tests and facilitating telework."

Montreal's director of public health, Dr. Mylne Drouin, expressed her opposition to the curfew, according to emails obtained by Radio-Canada in January.

Boileau says curfew was predecessor's call

Hammered with questions during a news conference Thursday, Dr. Luc Boileau, Quebec's interim public health director, distanced himself from the controversy, saying it was his predecessor's decision.

Boileau was head of theInstitut national d'excellence en sant et en services sociaux (INESSS)at the time a government health-care research institute. In that role, he said the INESSS informed the Quebec government of the strain on the hospitals.

"There was a very high level of risk," he said. "I was arguing that the situation was clearly a very dangerous one for the health system."

WATCH | Dr. Boileau says Quebec's health system under strain in December:

Boileau says former public health director made decision on curfew

3 years ago
Duration 0:56
Dr. Luc Boileau, Quebec's interim public health director, is distancing himself from the controversy surrounding the provincewide curfew enacted in December, saying it was his predecessors decision.

He said his predecessor likely made the recommendation based on the data at hand at the time.

Quebec Public Health takes into account several factors in its decision-making and when issuing recommendations for the province, the Health Ministry saidin a statement.

Those factors include the population's vulnerability, the labour situation, health-care capacity, the epidemiological situation, transmission rates and the rate of vaccination.

In January, Radio-Canada questioned the Health Ministry under the access to information law about how it had evaluated the restrictive measure 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.

Moreover, in a news releaseissued Dec. 30 by the Health Ministry, it claimed the justification to impose the curfew was based in part on an "ethical analysis."

"Clearly, we did not read the same memo,"wrote Liberal leader Dominique Angladein a tweet Thursday evening.

Parti Qubcois health critic Jol Arseneau tweetedthat the government had mocked Quebecers. Here-iterated calls for a public inquiry into the handling of the pandemic.

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.