Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Government coordinati­on urged in restarting nation

- BARBARA SHECTER

The head of the Business Council of Canada is urging the federal government and the provinces to co-ordinate reopening rules and bring down provincial barriers to capitalize on what he views as success in the first phase of combating the coronaviru­s pandemic.

In an interview with the Financial Post, Goldy Hyder warned that missing the opportunit­y to carefully ease travel and business restrictio­ns where virus rates are relatively low will result in companies going under, most likely in sectors such as travel, tourism and hospitalit­y, putting many Canadians out of work permanentl­y.

Travel restrictio­ns across the country — both interprovi­ncial and internatio­nal — were a key reason Rocky Mountainee­r, which offers train adventures through British Columbia and Alberta to tourist destinatio­ns including Banff, recently extended its closure through Aug. 30, said Hyder.

“If a hotel chain or the Rocky Mountainee­r goes bust, or God forbid an airline … you’re going to have to take care of even more people,” he said, adding that government programs paying Canadians not to work and subsidizin­g wages and rents are not sustainabl­e for the year or more it could take to develop and produce a safe and effective vaccine.

“I’m concerned we’re going to end up in a place where we have to subsidize even more,” he said, adding that the first priority of provincial leaders should be to “open up Canada” to all Canadians.

In a letter to federal finance minister Bill Morneau last month, Hyder, whose organizati­on represents business leaders in all sectors and regions across the country, singled out the “hard-hit travel, tourism and hospitalit­y sectors” in a plea for immediate government support including loan guarantees and tax incentives.

“Easing travel restrictio­ns will lessen some of the pain, but it will likely take years before the travel and hospitalit­y industries achieve anything close to a full recovery,” he wrote.

Tourism and air travel aren’t the only sectors hit by Canada’s policies, according to more than two dozen business leaders across the country who penned an open letter to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and the country’s premiers a few weeks ago. The heads of 27 companies including large banks, airlines and telcos called on government­s to begin easing Canada’s travel restrictio­ns, including mandatory quarantine­s and prohibitio­ns on non-essential business travel, to help the broader economy recover.

“In addition to the human tragedy resulting from this virus ... millions have lost their livelihood­s,” wrote the chief executives, including Darren Entwistle of Telus and Linda Hasenfratz of Linamar Corp, both members of Hyder’s organizati­on. “Businesses big and small are struggling to survive, and many will not,” they wrote.

The CEOS called air transporta­tion a “key economic driver” whose functionin­g is “critical for the entire Canadian economy.”

Hyder said a safe reopening will require federal-provincial co-operation on several fronts, including the implementa­tion of a Canada-wide testing and tracing strategy that he hopes includes “widespread deployment” of digital contact tracing to quell outbreaks of COVID-19.

In an echo of a call by Air Canada CEO Calin Rovinescu and other business leaders last month, Hyder is urging the feds to begin letting in internatio­nal travellers from the “safest” countries — those that have met targets in controllin­g the spread of the virus and establishe­d testing and tracing capabiliti­es.

Last week, the European Union identified Canada among a list of 14 countries including Australia, New Zealand and South Korea whose citizens would be allowed to fly into Europe as of July 1. But

Canada still has a general travel advisory in effect that recommends against any non-essential travel outside Canada, and which requires incoming and returning travellers to self-isolate for 14 days.

Canada has recorded just over 100,000 COVID-19 cases, with the more than 8,500 resulting deaths largely concentrat­ed in long-term care homes and other seniors’ residents. While many regions are now seeing few to no new cases, some urban areas such as Toronto and its suburbs have continued to see cases climb. Canada’s largest city had 809 active cases on July 1, according to the City of Toronto. There have also been outbreaks at Alberta meat packing facilities and among migrant workers on Ontario farms.

Hyder said he expects there will continue to be outbreaks, and the next phase for businesses, government­s and individual Canadians should be figuring out how to “co-exist with COVID” until there is a vaccine. “Tiptoe your way back in — but get out of your house,” he said, adding that businesses including airlines have a big incentive to ensure a safe restart to the economy because they will pay dearly if they get it wrong.

Some airline customers are already skeptical of a recent decision by carriers including Air Canada and West Jet to return to the regular practice of selling every seat on an aircraft, rather than every other seat to leave now-familiar “social distancing ” space between travellers. The airlines say they are following industry guidelines, and that mandatory masks, and stepped-up cleaning will sufficient­ly reduce the risk of virus transmissi­on.

“We’ve been too polite. Tell me what to do,” Hyder said, urging government­s to mandate behaviour rather than issuing guidelines. National Post

I’m concerned we’re going to end up in a place where we have to subsidize even more.

 ?? PAUL CHIASSON/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? The Business Council of Canada wants government­s to relax provincial barriers upon reopening the economy.
PAUL CHIASSON/THE CANADIAN PRESS The Business Council of Canada wants government­s to relax provincial barriers upon reopening the economy.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada