National Post (National Edition)

Atlantic region has done OK thanks to COVID bubble

Rebound in jobs, economic activity was quicker

- JULIE GORDON

OTTAWA • Chef Emily Wells was unsure what to expect as she opened the doors of her seasonal restaurant in rural Prince Edward Island the same day Canada's four Atlantic provinces bubbled together, allowing travel between them while keeping their borders restricted to everyone else.

The result was far better than she could have imagined.

“It was a remarkable summer, I was floored by it,” Wells said. “The bubble made all the difference. It certainly worked for us.”

The border restrictio­ns along with tough public health measures helped the east coast provinces, which have a combined population of 2.4 million, tamp down COVID-19 early on and largely keep the virus at bay even as the rest of the country entered a second wave of infections.

That success came at a cost. More than 171,000 jobs were lost, exports plunged and the region's $5 billion tourism sector was crippled, with all four provinces swinging from economic growth to sudden contractio­n.

While the initial impact was similar to what happened in the rest of Canada, data shows the rebound in jobs and economic activity that followed was quicker, bolstered by the ability to reopen the economy faster than the rest of the country.

“We knew (the Atlantic bubble) was going to help, we just didn't know what it would look like,” said P.E.I. Tourism Minister Matthew MacKay. His tiny province of 160,000 people ended up getting about a third of the record 1.6 million visitors it saw in 2019.

Without the bubble, it would have been far more painful, he said.

Between local support and bubble travellers, business at Mike Fritz's coffee shop along a popular PEI trail was surprising­ly strong. But he is eager to welcome a wider range of visitors next summer.

“We are hoping that at least the tourists from Ontario and Quebec can come back next season, because that's almost 60 per cent of our business,” said Fritz. But both of Canada's major airlines have slashed service to Atlantic Canada, which experts say will slow the broader tourism recovery and could discourage outside investment.

After months of strict restrictio­ns and mandatory quarantine­s, the four Atlantic provinces began to allow travel between themselves in early July amid concerns the sudden freedom would lead to a rash of outbreaks. That did not happen.

There have been 75 COVID-19 deaths in the region as of Tuesday, the bulk occurring before the bubble opened. There are now fewer than 12 active cases in P.E.I., Newfoundla­nd and Labrador, and Nova Scotia combined. In New Brunswick, which borders with Quebec where case counts are high, there are 55 active cases.

By comparison, Canada as a whole has had 9,999 deaths and currently has 26,165 active cases. The second wave has already led to targeted shutdowns in a some provinces outside Atlantic Canada.

That resurgence has hurt Canada's recovery, with the economy forecast to shrink 5.9 per cent this year, according to a Reuters poll.

Three of the four Atlantic provinces are set to fare better than that, according to analyst estimates, shrinking between 4.3 per cent and 5.4 per cent.

The surge in cases has also made it less clear when Atlantic Canada might reopen to other provinces, with public opinion firmly against expanding the bubble.

In Newfoundla­nd and Labrador, tour boat operator Joseph O'Brien took the unusual step of teaming up with his main competitor so the two could split costs and guests, rather than jousting for the limited number of visitors.

He estimates he averaged only 8 per cent of his regular capacity over the prime summer months, mostly due to not having visitors from Ontario, Canada's most populous province. Still, O'Brien supported the strict restrictio­ns to keep people safe.

“I'm not a scientist, but I know that drastic times call for drastic measures,” he said. “What don't break us usually makes us stronger.”

 ?? GREG LOCKE / REUTERS FILES ?? Tourism was down in Atlantic Canada this year because of the pandemic, but the bubble created between the four provinces helped. In Newfoundla­nd and Labrador a tour boat operator teamed up with his
main competitor to split costs and guests, rather than jousting for limited visitors.
GREG LOCKE / REUTERS FILES Tourism was down in Atlantic Canada this year because of the pandemic, but the bubble created between the four provinces helped. In Newfoundla­nd and Labrador a tour boat operator teamed up with his main competitor to split costs and guests, rather than jousting for limited visitors.

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