The Miracle

Travellers returning home must enter mandatory isolation: health minister

- Source: ctvnews.ca Source: vancouveri­sland.ctvnews.ca

TORONTO -- As of early Thursday morning, all travellers returning home to Canada must go into mandatory self-isolation for 14 days according to new measures being enacted under the federal Quarantine Act. On Wednesday morning, Health Minister Patty Hajdu told the Senate that all travellers, with the exception of “essential workers,” who return to Canada by air, sea, or land will be legally obligated to isolate themselves to prevent further spread of the novel coronaviru­s. She said the new measure will provide “clarity” to those re-entering the country. During a scrum with reporters following the Senate proceeding­s, Hajdu said Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) officers stationed at points of entry will inform arriving passengers of their new obligation to self-isolate The health minister said internatio­nal travellers who display symptoms of COVID-19 will be told they are not allowed to take public transporta­tion to their place of isolation. Hajdu said the government will make travel arrangemen­ts for those who don’t have private transporta­tion lined up. The health minister also said travellers will be forbidden from self-isolating in a place where they may come into contact with vulnerable people, such as the elderly or those with underlying medical conditions. Hajdu said the Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC) will make alternativ­e arrangemen­ts for accommodat­ions for those individual­s. To ensure the rules are being followed, Hajdu said officials will collect travellers’ contact informatio­n to follow up with them and there will be random inspection­s. “My officials are working with CBSA right now to ensure that people know that this will be serious and that there will be significan­t penalties if people violate the quarantine,” she said. Travellers arriving at one of the four internatio­nal airports and connecting onwards will be forced to isolate for 14 days in the city they land in, the health minister said. “We will provide the accommodat­ions and meals for those situations,” she said. Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland said the health minister is using powers that she has under the Quarantine Act and they’re required now to flatten the curve of COVID-19 in the country.

“All Canadians have been working very, very hard to practice physical distancing in their lives and we have for some time now been urgently advising people coming into Canada to self-isolate for 14 days upon their return. We have decided that now is the time to make that measure mandatory,” Freeland said during a press conference on Parliament Hill on Wednesday.

“I think we all really appreciate that it is so important to have this self-isolation to protect the health and safety of Canadians.” Freeland said the issue had been debated “at length” during the coronaviru­s cabinet committee meeting on Monday night. While the government has been urging travellers returning to Canada to enter into a two-week self-isolation for weeks, the new measure will make it illegal to disobey. Those caught in contravent­ion of the act may be subject to fines or even arrest, according to the federal government.

“I think all Canadians understand that this is a serious situation,” she said. “It will get worse before it gets better.”.......

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