Submit letters to the editor through our website, via email or in writing.Send your letter to the editor via email to editor@langleyadvancetimes.com. Please included your first and last name, address, and phone number.

Submit letters to the editor through our website, via email or in writing.Send your letter to the editor via email to editor@langleyadvancetimes.com. Please included your first and last name, address, and phone number.

LETTER: Is B.C. really doing as well as it thinks when it comes to COVID?

Stop comparing this province to the U.S., but rather look to our neighbours across the Pacific Ocean

Dear Editor,

Have you noticed of late how Premier Horgan and Health Minister Dix repeatedly make comparisons to the U.S. COVID response?

Do you think that maybe they are redirecting your attention by comparing to this lower performing jurisdiction?

True leadership aspires upwards, and thus a proper comparison of B.C. COVID performance must look to those places where the response has generated exceptional results.

RELATED: Fraser Health takes charge of COVID response at Langley Lodge

Case in point – Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Australia, and New Zealand have vastly out-performed B.C. in terms of deaths per population.

These are countries we actively trade with, have extensive family and personal connections with, and are pretty much in the same league with regards to economic, social and health-system development.

Agreed, the great work by the provincial health officer, Dr. Henry, may have kept us from an even worse performance.

Yet, the circumstances that B.C. has had many more truly avoidable deaths than what is being experienced on the other side of the Pacific is telling, although these facts go pretty much unreported.

READ MORE – VIDEO: Langley seniors send big thanks to Dr. Henry

Possibly the recently acquiescent media might return to its previous role of asking and demanding answers to this kind of hard question. Possibly the B.C. Liberals can put together a cohesive plan to demonstrate to British Columbians that a better way forward might be possible, but so far not much of relevance.

The only way we make something good of these difficult circumstances is learning what went well and less so. But we must gather these lessons now so to prepare for the next public safety crisis, and no time to lose as that big earthquake predicted for our region will not give any warning, just like the unannounced arrival of COVID.

British Columbians deserve our thought-leaders to improve public safety through seeking and applying best-practices. It is about time to get on with this public debate so we are better prepared for the next calamity.

Joe Sulmona, Burnaby

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Langley Advance Times