Close X
Saturday, January 4, 2025
ADVT 
National

Officials detail exemptions to border shutdown

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Nov, 2020 11:48 PM
  • Officials detail exemptions to border shutdown

Immigration officials say the federal government granted 1,300 national interest exemptions during the COVID-19 pandemic to allow people into Canada who don't qualify under current border restrictions.

The Canadian border has been closed since March to all but a specific list of people, albeit one that has grown longer as the pandemic has continued.

Among those allowed in are essential workers and certain family members of Canadian citizens and permanent residents.

Broadly, those whose travel is considered optional or discretionary aren't allowed in, but exemptions can be made if certain ministers sign off on the plan.

Among those who have benefited: pro hockey and baseball players, though basketball players were recently denied.

The exemption has also been used to admit high-profile U.S. executives, which has prompted heated debate over who, exactly, gets to access the exemptions and why.

The number of exemptions that have been granted so far was disclosed at a House of Commons immigration committee meeting Wednesday.

Federal Immigration Minister Marco Mendicino was pressed by MPs over all the various ways the pandemic has hammered the immigration system.

He was grilled on what appears to be a breakdown in a promise to review, within 14 days, applications for cross-border travel by family members, a policy announced with much fanfare earlier this fall after months of pressure by affected families.

NDP MP Jenny Kwan said she was aware of at least 100 people who have not had their files approved within that 14 days. Conservative MP Raquel Dancho said she had a list of her own.

Mendicino promised to review the cases the two MPs mentioned.

"Our goal here is to reunite as many families as possible," he said.

Kwan also pointed to the thousands of people stuck overseas with expired documents that keep needing to be renewed, but who can't get that to happen. She also mentioned the situation of some postgraduate students in Canada facing a similar problem.

Mendicino said no student will get expelled because their permits have expired.

"We recognize that COVID-19 has caused disruption," he said.

MORE National ARTICLES

Canada faces instability after U.S cliffhanger

Canada faces instability after U.S cliffhanger
The U.S. presidential race remains too close to call, with millions of votes still being counted in battleground states including Michigan, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Georgia and North Carolina.

Canada faces instability after U.S cliffhanger

Vancouver Police closes suspicious Marpole incident file

Vancouver Police closes suspicious Marpole incident file
According to surveillance video, a woman and man were involved in an altercation along West 59th before two men arrived minutes later in a white SUV.

Vancouver Police closes suspicious Marpole incident file

Aviation pioneer Max Ward dies at 98

Aviation pioneer Max Ward dies at 98
Family friend Jacquie Perrin says Ward collapsed yesterday at his home in Edmonton and died shortly after in hospital, surrounded by his family and 20 days short of his 99th birthday.

Aviation pioneer Max Ward dies at 98

Liberals continue filibuster over WE affair

Liberals continue filibuster over WE affair
Liberal MPs occupied most of two hours with ruminations on the role of Parliament, the proper business of the ethics committee, and the value of the organizations the other parties' MPs want to examine.

Liberals continue filibuster over WE affair

Fraser Health opening new COVID-19 testing centre

Fraser Health opening new COVID-19 testing centre
The newest centre will be open by Nov. 12 in North Surrey and will process between 500 and 800 tests each day with people dropping in or booking an appointment.

Fraser Health opening new COVID-19 testing centre

'Murder' hornet found in Abbotsford

'Murder' hornet found in Abbotsford
The hornets can reach up to five centimetres in length with a wingspan of four to seven centimetres and are normally found in China, Japan, Thailand and other Asian countries.

'Murder' hornet found in Abbotsford