National Post

No passport, no entry brings mixed feelings

- JACOB SEREBRIN

MONTREAL • Quebec’s vaccine passport system was launched on Wednesday, and while Montreal business owners said the day generally went well, they lamented the thought of turning potential clients away and increasing their employees’ workloads.

Hamid Kiani, the owner of bakery and café Vasconia Boulangeri­e in Le Plateau-mont-royal borough, said he had already refused entry to several clients earlier in the morning because they didn’t have evidence they had received two shots of COVID-19 vaccine.

“We lost three or four groups of people here because I asked them to show me their passport and they didn’t have it,” he said in an interview. “They said, ‘We have our passport but it is not with us at this moment.’”

The government is requiring anyone in the province to show proof of vaccinatio­n to access businesses and events deemed non-essential, such as restaurant­s, gyms and festivals. Patrons are required to show quick response codes, or QR codes, issued by the government, which are scanned by a smartphone applicatio­n. People from outside the province must show ID and a paper copy of their proof of vaccinatio­n.

Kiani said he posted a sign on his café’s door informing people of the new health order, and he said he planned to print out a copy of his QR code and place it near the cash register so clients feel comfortabl­e.

At Café Chez Teta, a Lebanese restaurant, coowner Melodie Roukoz said she also made a sign informing customers they need to have proof of vaccinatio­n and ID ready.

“Today, everyone was understand­ing and we didn’t have any problems,” she said, adding that she’s worried the requiremen­t could slow things down on busier days.

Roukoz said she had mixed feelings on the passport. While it will be an additional hassle for employees at a time when her business is already struggling to find workers, she also sees it as a way to keep her dining room from closing again this winter.

“I feel safe because I know that we’re controllin­g things, or trying to control the COVID situation,” she said. “Of course, we don’t want to close our dining room again, so we’ll do everything to stay open, for sure.”

Health Minister Christian Dubé has said there will be a two-week grace period during which no penalties will be imposed for non-compliance. But starting Sept. 15, people and businesses caught violating the health order can face thousands of dollars in fines.

At bar Bistro De Paris, owner Claude Legault said scanning QR codes was easy and while some older clients didn’t have their proof of vaccinatio­n, he said he was able to print out their QR codes on a computer in his office.

The vaccine passport is preferable to another lockdown, he said. “It’s definitely better than closing, but we’re going to lose a lot of money all the same,” he said in an interview.

Closing time remains at 1 a.m. instead of the pre-pandemic 3 a.m., capacity is still limited and live music hasn’t returned to his bar, he said, adding he expected he’ll have to turn away some customers because they’re not vaccinated.

Speaking to reporters on Wednesday morning, Premier François Legault said he believes Quebecers support the measure, noting 87 per cent of them have received at least one dose of vaccine.

“It means (they) approve the vaccine, support the vaccine, so I expect that it will go smoothly, but it may happen that the small minority will be unhappy, but I think that the vast majority of the population, they support the passport, they want a return to back to a normal life,” he said.

 ?? GRAHAM HUGHES / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Linda Henry has her COVID-19 QR code scanned by Jonathan Gagné, manager of Orangetheo­ry Fitness, in Montreal on Wednesday.
GRAHAM HUGHES / THE CANADIAN PRESS Linda Henry has her COVID-19 QR code scanned by Jonathan Gagné, manager of Orangetheo­ry Fitness, in Montreal on Wednesday.

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