Lethbridge Herald

Negative test required to enter Canada

Air travellers will soon have to test negative for COVID-19 before arrival

- Maan Alhmidi THE CANADIAN PRESS — OTTAWA

The federal government says it plans to require air travellers to test negative for COVID-19 before landing in Canada in response to concerns that people vacationin­g abroad could bring the novel coronaviru­s home with them.

Cabinet ministers met Wednesday morning following criticism from the premiers of Canada’s two largest provinces that federal efforts at the border were too loose and allowing new cases and strains of the virus to enter the country.

Intergover­nmental Affairs Minister Dominic LeBlanc said all passengers on flights entering Canada will soon be required to have a negative PCR test three days before their arrival.

PCR tests are designed to detect minute amounts of the virus that causes COVID-19, usually through a swab up the nose or in the mouth.

It wasn’t immediatel­y clear when the new requiremen­t will be put in place, with LeBlanc saying more informatio­n would follow in the coming days.

It does not appear to apply to anyone crossing by car into Canada through a border point with the United States.

“Right now, the greatest concern that we have heard among Canadians is the impact of internatio­nal travel at our airports,” Public Safety Minister Bill Blair said.

Several other countries, including the U.S., have implemente­d a negative test requiremen­t for incoming passengers.

The identifica­tion of new strains of COVID-19 in the U.K. and South Africa has only heightened concerns about cross-border spread of the virus.

The government had months to implement a similar system in Canada, but instead rolled out a haphazard announceme­nt in response to headlines, said Conservati­ve health critic Michelle Rempel.

“Our MP offices have already been receiving inquiries this morning from panicked travellers abroad on this new requiremen­t,” she said in a statement Wednesday.

“Justin Trudeau has had months to get his act together on this front, and today’s detail-free announceme­nt is irresponsi­ble.”

The National Airlines Council of Canada, which represents the country’s largest airlines, said it has been asking the federal government for months to introduce a coordinate­d testing regime in consultati­on with the industry.

But council president Mike McNaney said Wednesday’s announceme­nt was made without consultati­on.

“While industry will do all it can to implement the new requiremen­ts, and ensure passengers are aware of their obligation­s, given the lack of detail and prior consultati­on this is going to be a very challengin­g exercise, the complexity of which the government must not underestim­ate,” McNaney said in a statement.

Government officials for months have asked people to stay home and avoid non-essential travel to slow the spread of COVID-19, all the while acknowledg­ing that they can’t block Canadians from leaving or reentering the country.

That hasn’t stopped people from hopping on planes to head abroad, including politician­s who now find themselves in hot water over their vacation plans.

Ontario Finance Minister Rod Phillips faces calls for his resignatio­n after being caught in the Caribbean island nation of St. Barts. Saskatchew­an Highways Minister Joe Hargrave promised to isolate for two weeks once he comes back from Palm Springs, Calif., to finalize the sale of a house. And in Quebec, Liberal Pierre Arcand was facing heat for a trip with his wife to Barbados.

Asked about the issue Wednesday, Premier Brian Pallister said politician­s and staffers in Manitoba were “all aware of the importance of setting a proper example.”

None of the five federal parties said they were aware Wednesday of any MPs travelling abroad for nonessenti­al reasons, such as a vacation.

Anyone coming back into the country is required to quarantine for 14 days, or face six-figure fines or up to six months in jail.

That requiremen­t alone hasn’t been enough for Ontario Premier Doug Ford, who has demanded strict testing of arriving passengers at the country’s largest airport in Toronto, vowing to go it alone if Ottawa doesn’t act.

Blair said discussion­s are underway for a testing program at Toronto’s Pearson Internatio­nal Airport.

Quebec Premier Francois Legault made a similar demand for testing, denouncing before Christmas what he called Ottawa’s slow movement to tighten measures.

He suggested Quebec might do something drastic to stem the tide of rising cases.

Federal officials said Wednesday that testing alone at the border, or even pre-flight, wasn’t foolproof. Canada’s deputy chief public health officer, Dr. Howard Njoo, said individual­s found with the new strains of COVID-19 were in quarantine when their symptoms showed up.

“Testing pre-departure or at the border will pick up some people, but not all,” he said.

“Quarantine ... is the most effective measure.”

Blair said more border officers have been sent to internatio­nal airports to ensure travellers understand the quarantine rules and to verify their isolation plans

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