Medicine Hat News

Feds, provinces agree on vaccine passport for travel: PM

- LAURA OSMAN The Canadian Press

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced provinces and the federal government have agreed on a new national vaccine passport for domestic and internatio­nal travel — and many Canadians already have them in their phones and wallets.

Rather than distribute a separate federal document for internatio­nal travel, provinces and territorie­s have agreed to tailor their own vaccine passports so they will all have the same look, feel and security measures based on the internatio­nal standard for so-called smart health cards, which contain features to help prevent tampering.

Several have already begun to roll out the new proofs of vaccinatio­n, including Newfoundla­nd and Labrador, Nova Scotia, Quebec, Ontario, Nunavut, Saskatchew­an, Northwest Territorie­s and Yukon.

It is distinguis­hed by a Canada word mark in the top corner.

“I’m happy to confirm that all provinces and territorie­s have confirmed that they will be moving forward with a standardiz­ed, national proof of vaccinatio­n,” Trudeau said at a news conference in Ottawa Thursday.

All provinces plan to have their version of the Canadian document available by the end of November, said government officials in a technical briefing held on condition of anonymity.

The passport will be digital and feature a QR code that includes the vaccinatio­n history. Paper copies will also be accepted.

The only health informatio­n contained in the proof of vaccinatio­n will be the holder’s name and vaccine informatio­n, such as the type of vaccine, lot number, date of vaccinatio­n and the number of doses.

While provinces have taken the lead on standardiz­ing the national document, the federal government promised $1 billion to pay for the work.

Nova Scotia’s Health Minister Michelle Thompson said Thursday that her province’s system has been aligned with the federal initiative

“from the start.”

“There should be no disruption. It should be seamless,” Thompson said.

Some other provinces will have to make changes.

British Columbia Premier John Horgan said the province was one of the first to introduce a proof-of-vaccine document, knowing full well it wouldn’t serve for internatio­nal travel because the B.C. document doesn’t include enough detail.

“We wanted to make sure that British Columbians could participat­e within their own communitie­s,” Horgan said at a press conference Thursday.

At the time, he said, he thought a vaccine document for internatio­nal travel was federal jurisdicti­on.

“That was not my knitting. I left that to them to deal with,” he said.

He added he doesn’t regret putting the B.C. passport out quickly.

Manitoba Premier Kelvin Goertzen said in a statement his province was the first to implement a proof-of-vaccinatio­n credential and has been actively working with federal, provincial and territoria­l partners to support the safe resumption of travel for those who are fully vaccinated.

As such, he said Manitoba would offer the new vaccinatio­n credential - meeting the requiremen­ts of the pan-Canadian standard as of Monday.

The federal government said the technology used in the standardiz­ed document prevents forgeries and tampering by detecting any changes to the document after it is issued.

“We applaud the leadership of the federal, provincial and territoria­l government­s in providing a standardiz­ed credential that can be used to facilitate travel and other activities across the country,” said Mark Agnew with the Canadian Chamber of Commerce in a statement Thursday.

“Vaccine credential­s are a critical building block in our economic recovery while keeping Canadians safe.”

Canadian officials have been working with internatio­nal travel organizati­ons and border service agencies of top Canadian destinatio­ns to ensure the document will be recognized around the world.

 ?? CP PHOTO SEAN KILPATRICK ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaks in Ottawa on Thursday.
CP PHOTO SEAN KILPATRICK Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaks in Ottawa on Thursday.

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