Penticton Herald

Vaccine now mandatory for federal employees, travellers

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OTTAWA — Ottawa will require federal employees, workers in federally regulated industries and many travellers to be vaccinated against COVID-19, marking a shift in the federal government’s position on vaccine mandates.

The move — which will affect roughly 1.5 million workers and those who opt to travel by air, interprovi­ncial train and cruise — is necessary to protect against more dangerous variants of COVID-19, said Dominic LeBlanc, head of the Privy Council.

“The government of Canada has a large workforce and a large reach to help in the fight against COVID19. It is both our opportunit­y but also our duty to lead by example,” LeBlanc said Friday.

There are close to half a million people who work directly for the federal government, a Crown corporatio­n, the military or the RCMP, and nearly a million more who work in federally regulated industries. There is no set deadline when the mandate will come into effect.

“We will take the time needed to get this right, but we will also act very quickly,” LeBlanc said. “We are targeting implementa­tion early this fall, and we will obviously communicat­e the details as this work unfolds. But this work unfolds immediatel­y.”

Transport Minister Omar Alghabra said the government will require workers in federally regulated industries to be vaccinated no later than the end of October.

Travellers on commercial airlines, interprovi­ncial trains and cruise ships will also be required to be vaccinated by that date. There will be exceptions for those who cannot be vaccinated for medical reasons, or due to other protected grounds.

Alghabra said the rules will help Canada recover from the pandemic more quickly.

“Canadians don’t want to go back to lockdowns. Canadians don’t want to go back to travel restrictio­ns. Canadians want to go back to normal as quickly as possible,” he said.

At last count, nearly 82 per cent of Canadians 12 and older had at least one dose of vaccine, while 70 per cent had been fully vaccinated.

The rate of vaccinatio­n has slowed in recent weeks, just as infections driven by the contagious Delta variant of COVID-19 have picked up.

The government months ago balked at the idea of vaccine mandates, but LeBlanc said the new landscape changes things.

“This is an evolution of the government’s posture in protecting the health and safety of Canadians since the beginning of the pandemic,” he said. “We have scientific data but also real-world evidence on how remarkably effective are the vaccines that have been approved for use by Health Canada.”

At least one union representi­ng federal employees has already come out in favour of the mandate.

“As the union representi­ng the scientists who approved the COVID-19 vaccines, PIPSC welcomes all efforts to increase vaccinatio­n coverage in Canada,” said Debi Daviau, president of the Profession­al Institute of the Public Service of Canada.

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