Medicine Hat News

Ottawa lays out criteria for quarantine hotels as it inches toward new travel rule

- CHRISTOPHE­R REYNOLDS

Hotel operators seeking to take part in Canada’s mandatory three-day quarantine for returning travellers can now access the criteria, though it comes as cold comfort to a battered industry.

The conditions posted online put the government one step closer to fulfilling its late-January pledge that all passengers returning from non-essential trips abroad will have to self-isolate in a federally mandated facility for up to 72 hours at their own expense.

The government has not said when the measure, which aims to head off COVID-19 cases and contagious variants of the novel coronaviru­s at the border, will come into effect.

Hoteliers say the criteria seem reasonable, but doubt the quarantine rule will deliver a significan­t boost in business to the hammered hospitalit­y sector.

To qualify as a “listed hotel,” lodgings must be near one of the four airports currently accepting internatio­nal flights - in Montreal, Toronto, Calgary and Vancouver.

They must provide transporta­tion from the airport, free wireless internet access and nocontact meal delivery to rooms, according to the Public Health Agency of Canada.

Hotels would also have to set up a process for brief outdoor breaks and report daily check-in and checkout numbers, as well as non-compliant guests to the agency. That means monitoring traveller movement within the building, it says.

Hotel submission­s are due on Wednesday, two days after the criteria were posted online.

Hotel operators question whether the quarantine order, which will see guests pay upwards of $2,000, including the cost of a mandatory COVID-19 test, will help them rebuild after a sector collapse.

“I don’t think this is going to boost anything,” said Eve Pare, who heads the Hotel Associatio­n of Greater Montreal.

“There’ll be very few travellers.”

Associatio­n members have lost $700 million in room revenue and laid off 90 per cent of their staff, she said.

“It’s been a disaster since the very beginning of the pandemic.”

She added that the health agency’s criteria seem easy to meet for hotels that lie within the requisite 10-kilometre radius of the airport.

“What they ask, it’s pretty much what’s already there,” she said, referring to stipulatio­ns from ventilatio­n to laundry to cleaning protocols. Hotels that have all but shut down will have to rehire cooks or order food from off-site, she noted.

The need to quarantine in a hotel is one of a series of federal measures targeting internatio­nal travel in the past month.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced on Jan. 29 that Canadian airlines had suspended flights to Mexico and the Caribbean until April 30, and that hotel selfisolat­ion was en route.

As of Jan. 7, residents who choose to fly abroad have had to provide proof of negative results for a COVID-19 test taken less than 72 hours before departure back to home soil.

The upcoming quarantine rule has faced resistance from civil liberties advocates concerned about its impact on mobility rights.

The Canadian Civil Liberties Associatio­n said Monday it might unfairly impact Canadians — particular­ly lower-income travellers — who need to care for sick relatives or receive specialize­d medical care abroad.

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