Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Air travellers to be checked for fevers at Canadian airports

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 12 Jun, 2020 07:59 PM
  • Air travellers to be checked for fevers at Canadian airports

Air travellers will need to have their temperatures checked before they're allowed to board planes but the system will take months to set up, Transport Minister Marc Garneau said Friday.

The measure is meant to keep COVID-19 from spreading as more people start flying again.

Garneau said the requirement will be phased in, starting with people boarding planes bound for Canada at the end of June. It will expand to the country's four largest airports (in Toronto, Montreal, Vancouver and Calgary) by the end of July, and then 11 more airports serving mostly domestic travellers at the end of September.

The order for travellers heading into Canada from abroad is easy for the government to impose: airlines, many of which are already conducting such checks, are responsible for them. Within Canada, the checks will be done by the Canadian Air Transport Security Authority.

"It will take us a little longer to purchase the equipment, set up the procedures, so we can screen people when they are departing on domestic flights," Garneau said.

He said if a first check finds a would-be traveller has a fever, his or her temperature will be taken again in 10 minutes. Anyone found with a fever in both checks will not be allowed to fly and will be told to try again in 14 days.

"That's an arbitrary but prudent amount of time," Garneau said.

"We're working with the airlines, the intention is that the rebooking would not be more expensive but just be a rebooking to a different date."

Other costs associated with delaying a flight by two weeks will be up to travellers, however.

Canada has rules against allowing people on planes who have obvious symptoms of the novel coronavirus and screening forms meant to get travellers to self-report the possibility they are sick. But it has not been actively checking flyers for fevers, as many other countries have.

Not everyone with COVID-19 has a fever and not everyone with a fever has COVID-19 but Garneau said the fever checks add an extra layer of safety for others on planes and for people at travellers' destinations.

MORE National ARTICLES

Feds continue to add to COVID-19 supply stores to meet future demand

Feds continue to add to COVID-19 supply stores to meet future demand
Planes and boats loaded with personal protective equipment and other COVID-19 supplies continue to arrive in Canada as the federal government moves to increase the domestic stockpile of crucial gear.

Feds continue to add to COVID-19 supply stores to meet future demand

Press pass offering little defence for journalists caught in the U.S. fray

Press pass offering little defence for journalists caught in the U.S. fray
Press passes and television cameras, once powerful symbols of neutrality that helped protect journalists working in combat zones, are providing little defence for reporters and crews covering the escalating urban conflict in the United States.

Press pass offering little defence for journalists caught in the U.S. fray

Joint federal-provincial inquiry into N.S. mass shooting a good option: top expert

Joint federal-provincial inquiry into N.S. mass shooting a good option: top expert
As pressure mounts on the federal and Nova Scotia governments to call an inquiry into one of the worst mass killings in Canadian history, the country's leading scholar on inquiries says Ottawa and the province should do the right thing and work together on a joint inquest.

Joint federal-provincial inquiry into N.S. mass shooting a good option: top expert

As U.S. boils over, Trudeau says systemic racism in Canada must be addressed

As U.S. boils over, Trudeau says systemic racism in Canada must be addressed
As long-standing anger about discrimination boils over in the United States, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says Canadians must recognize there is systemic racism in their own country.

As U.S. boils over, Trudeau says systemic racism in Canada must be addressed

Metro Vancouver homes sales fall 44 per cent in May, but prices are high as ever

Metro Vancouver homes sales fall 44 per cent in May, but prices are high as ever
Home sales in the Greater Vancouver area continued their steep year-over-year drop last month amid confinement measures and physical distancing requirements related to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Metro Vancouver homes sales fall 44 per cent in May, but prices are high as ever

Ban US President Donald Trump from Twitter? Trump forced to hide in WhiteHouse Bunker

Ban US President Donald Trump from Twitter? Trump forced to hide in WhiteHouse Bunker
Donald Trump adds fuel to the fire with his tweets with George Floyd's death at the hands of police officers in Minnesota. There are violent demonstrations all over the US and around the world in relation to race and police brutality.

Ban US President Donald Trump from Twitter? Trump forced to hide in WhiteHouse Bunker