Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
National

Trudeau leaves door open to tighter travel ban

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Jan, 2021 07:49 PM
  • Trudeau leaves door open to tighter travel ban

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is leaving the door open to tighter travel restrictions, including a possible ban on outbound air travel as COVID-19 case counts climb across the country.

“We’re always open to strengthening them as necessary," Trudeau said, referring to measures restricting international flights.

He said the government is keeping a close eye on countries where more easily transmissible strains of the coronavirus that causes COVID-19 have broken out.

The prime minister pointed to worrisome mutations in Brazil as well as the United Kingdom, whose outbound flights Canada banned in December.

Those flights have been permitted again after government began requiring incoming air travellers to present proof of recent negative COVID-19 tests before boarding.

“We will continue to look at various variants, various geographies, and make sure we’re taking the right decisions and the right measures to keep Canadians safe," Trudeau said at a press conference at Rideau Hall on Friday.

The choice of whether to bar travel to the United States lies largely with the U.S., not Canada, since the country of arrival has jurisdiction over who enters, he added.

Earlier this month, a survey by Léger and the Association for Canadian Studies found that 87 per cent of respondents said they would support a total ban on international travel until there are several consecutive days of reduced numbers of COVID-19 cases.

Leger vice-president Christian Bourque said that response is consistent with similar questions asked throughout the pandemic, but also reflects a growing desire by Canadians for governments to take stronger action to curb the spread of COVID-19.

Trudeau sought to explain the disparity between stringent lockdown measures such as Ontario's stay-at-home order or Quebec's curfew and the open runway on jetting off to a Caribbean all-inclusive.

“Different jurisdictions will set up the rules that they think are best based on the best advice of their public health officials. On the federal side we have discouraged non-essential international travel, including by imposing mandatory quarantines for anyone returning to Canada and now mandatory testing for anyone before they get on a plane to come back to Canada," he said.

The new curtailments prompted airlines to slash flight schedules over the past week, with Air Canada and WestJet announcing 2,700 layoffs.

Air Transat flight numbers have fallen by more than 90 per cent year over year, the company said.

A ban on non-essential travel would mean a total shutdown, at least for a time, said spokesman Christophe Hennebelle.

"However 'essential travel' is defined, such a ban would probably mean that we would need to stop our operations entirely, unless specific support is granted to help us maintain some form of connectivity," he said in an email.

MORE National ARTICLES

Airlines lure customers with 'bait and switch'

Airlines lure customers with 'bait and switch'
Instead, the Oshawa, Ont., duo say they and their 84 guests are out more than $216,000 after their Sunwing Airlines vacation package was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Airlines lure customers with 'bait and switch'

Top court sides with Maple Leaf Foods

Top court sides with Maple Leaf Foods
In a decision today, the top court says Maple Leaf Foods did not owe the submarine sandwich outlets a duty of care under the law.

Top court sides with Maple Leaf Foods

Feds, some provinces have room to spend more: PBO

Feds, some provinces have room to spend more: PBO
Based on the budget officer's calculations, the government could increase spending, reduce taxes, or a combination of the two to the tune of $19 billion and still reduce the debt-to-GDP ratio over time to pre-pandemic levels.

Feds, some provinces have room to spend more: PBO

Economy added 84,000 jobs in October

Economy added 84,000 jobs in October
Nearly 450,000 were considered long-term unemployed last month, meaning they had been without a job for 27 weeks or more, with their ranks swelling by 79,000 in September and then 151,000 more in October.

Economy added 84,000 jobs in October

Public’s Help Sought in Locating Suspect with Canada Wide Warrant

Public’s Help Sought in Locating Suspect with Canada Wide Warrant
At approximately 10:50pm, on Wednesday, November 4, Transit Police officers checked a man in the area of Surrey Central Station who had an outstanding Canada-wide warrant for break and enter. When officers tried to arrest the man, he immediately began resisting the arrest and fighting with officers, twice breaking free, and eventually evading arrest.

Public’s Help Sought in Locating Suspect with Canada Wide Warrant

Ottawa's silence needed on U.S. election: experts

Ottawa's silence needed on U.S. election: experts
Trump claimed a triumph early Wednesday even though mail-in votes were still being legally counted, including in key swing states such as Pennsylvania, a process that could take days.

Ottawa's silence needed on U.S. election: experts