Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canada-U.S. travel ban extended: DHS

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Jul, 2020 06:21 PM
  • Canada-U.S. travel ban extended: DHS

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security says Canada and the United States have agreed to extend their mutual ban on non-essential travel between the two countries until Aug.20.

Acting Homeland Security Secretary Chad Wolf confirmed the news in a tweet earlier today.

The Canada-U.S. border has been closed to so-called "discretionary" travel like vacations and shopping trips since the COVID-19 pandemic took hold of the continent in mid-March, an agreement that had been set to expire July 21.

The extension comes with COVID-19 resurgent across the U.S. — cases are on the rise in all 50 states, and southern states like Florida, Arizona and California are facing a fresh crisis with overcrowded hospital wards, refrigerated truck trailers serving as makeshift morgues and another shortage of personal protective medical gear.

The escalating emergency has also exposed a deep divide between Canadians dead-set against reopening the border and U.S. lawmakers in northern border states who continue to press both countries for a blueprint for doing exactly that.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has called the extent of the pandemic in the U.S. a "constantly evolving" situation, but won't say whether officials have considered extending the border restrictions beyond the standard 30-day window.

"Based on the success of the existing restrictions and close collaboration with Mexico and Canada, (the Department of Homeland Security) will continue to limit non-essential travel at our land ports of entry with Canada and Mexico until Aug. 20," Wolf tweeted.

MORE National ARTICLES

Murder trial for man accused in Toronto's van attack set for November

Murder trial for man accused in Toronto's van attack set for November
The trial for the man accused of using a van to kill 10 people on a busy Toronto sidewalk has been set for this fall.

Murder trial for man accused in Toronto's van attack set for November

Joint inquiry or review of mass killing taking shape, N.S. justice minister says

Joint inquiry or review of mass killing taking shape, N.S. justice minister says
There will be a joint federal-provincial inquiry or review into the mass killing that claimed 22 lives in rural Nova Scotia in April, but the exact form of that investigation is still taking shape, the province's justice minister says.

Joint inquiry or review of mass killing taking shape, N.S. justice minister says

Drone retrieves human remains, pieces of navy helicopter that crashed off Greece

Drone retrieves human remains, pieces of navy helicopter that crashed off Greece
The Canadian Armed Forces has ended a mission to retrieve the wreckage of Stalker 22, a Cyclone helicopter that went down off the coast of Greece in April with six military members on board.

Drone retrieves human remains, pieces of navy helicopter that crashed off Greece

Trudeau government given failing grade for lack of action plan on MMIWG

Trudeau government given failing grade for lack of action plan on MMIWG
It was Sonya Nadine Mae Cywink's 31st birthday when she went missing in Ontario in mid-August of 1994.

Trudeau government given failing grade for lack of action plan on MMIWG

More Arctic politicians join call for RCMP to wear body cameras in Nunavut

More Arctic politicians join call for RCMP to wear body cameras in Nunavut
The mayor of Iqaluit is joining other Arctic leaders calling for RCMP members in Nunavut to wear body cameras.

More Arctic politicians join call for RCMP to wear body cameras in Nunavut

Meng hearing schedule to expand; lawyers ask for 'referee' in case

Meng hearing schedule to expand; lawyers ask for 'referee' in case
Legal arguments at the B.C. Supreme Court in the extradition case of Huawei executive Meng Wanzhou may stretch into next year.

Meng hearing schedule to expand; lawyers ask for 'referee' in case