Medicine Hat News

U.S. lawmakers, advocates pushing Ottawa to eliminate ArriveCan, open Nexus offices

- JAMES MCCARTEN

WASHINGTON

Lawmakers and cross-border business advocates in the United States want

Justin Trudeau’s Liberal government to go back to the future in order to ease travel delays between the U.S. and Canada.

Nearly 1,500 emails have been sent to federal MPs and Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino since the Canadian American Business Council’s new campaign, “Travel Like it’s 2019,” went live two weeks ago.

The online campaign calls on Ottawa to scrap the troublesom­e ArriveCan app, a mandatory pre-screening tool for visitors to Canada, and to tackle the backlog plaguing the Canada-U.S. trusted-traveller system known as Nexus.

Both are direct symptoms of the COVID-19 pandemic, and are just part of a constellat­ion of factors critics say are causing widespread travel delays across the continent and discouragi­ng some would-be travellers.

But they are also the easiest factors to eliminate, said council CEO Maryscott Greenwood, who fears the pandemic has become an easy excuse to allow for the gradual thickening of the Canada-U.S. border.

“The public health emergency has given government­s permission to have an asynchrono­us approach to what should be synchronou­s border policy,” Greenwood said in an interview.

“That’s a major shift. That’s really different. And we have to fix that.”

Just last week, Transport Minister Omar Alghabra told the House of Commons transport committee that the lingering after-effects of the pandemic are to blame for chronic travel delays at Canadian airports.

Opposition Conservati­ves, however, have been trying to make a political lightning rod out of ArriveCan, the smartphone app and web portal visitors must use to upload their travel documentat­ion and vaccinatio­n status ahead of time.

So, too, have some U.S. lawmakers. “This requiremen­t disincenti­vizes travel, harms the flow of commerce, and burdens travellers with the submission of private health informatio­n,” New York Rep. Elise Stefanik, a Republican, wrote in a letter last week to Mendicino and Kirsten Hillman, Canada’s ambassador to the U.S.

Some travellers are intimidate­d by the app requiremen­t, while others fail to follow the upload procedure until they arrive at the border or the airport, causing customs delays, Stefanik continued.

“As a result, travellers are choosing to stay home rather than face long wait times and frustratio­ns caused by the ArriveCan app.”

On Nexus, New York Democrat Rep. Brian Higgins wrote to Chris Magnus, the commission­er of U.S. Customs and Border Protection, to demand the agency prioritize clearing a backlog of applicatio­ns on the U.S. end.

The system receives between 8,000 and 15,000 applicatio­ns a day, Higgins wrote, and the current wait time for an appointmen­t is upwards of nine months.

He also cited recent border statistics that suggest the volume of traffic entering the U.S. is still a shadow of what it was in 2019.

Data released by the border agency last week show 250,678 personal passenger vehicles crossed into the U.S. in the Buffalo-Niagara Falls region in June of this year, compared with 462,665 in June 2019.

“These diminished operations are harmful to the United States economy as well as the quality of life along our northern border,” Higgins wrote.

“The timely processing of Nexus applicatio­ns and interviews will increase border activity as we work towards recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic.”

The current applicatio­n backlog for Nexus has reached 350,000. Nexus offices in the U.S. reopened in April, while the 13 enrolment centres in Canada remain closed.

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