Virtual Parliament struggling with technology, security, interpretation, report says
Parliament's available interpreters sit at less than half their pre-pandemic numbers
A House of Commons committee has made a number of recommendations it says are required to improve its work during the pandemic including becoming fully virtual, improving cyber security and dealing with a translation service that is "dangerously close" to being unable to do its job.
A report by the standing committee on procedure and House affairs released Friday, took a look at the challenges facing Parliament as it strives to continue operating despite much of the rest of the country being shut down due to the pandemic.
The "House of Commons [should] continue to take an incremental approach ... recognizing capacity constraints, the need for testing, and the need for improvements, and that any added parliamentary activities be agreed upon by each recognized party," the report said.
Establishing a fully virtual Parliament, the report said, will require setting "up a secure electronic voting system for conducting votes in virtual sittings as soon as possible…"