National Post

Canadians keeping U.S. taxis active

Services used to sidestep border restrictio­ns

- Allison lampert and anna mehler Paperny

U.S. taxi and limousine services are seeing a boom in business from customers seeking to enter Canada by land to avoid a restrictio­n on internatio­nal travel that applies only to air traffic.

While both Canadian land and air travellers are required to take a test within three days of departure, and again on arrival, only those flying to Canada must spend up to three days of the required 14-day quarantine period in a hotel.

That has led to a surge of calls for taxi and limousine services from Canadians who fly through U.S. airports in states like New York and then cross over the land border, representa­tives of four companies told Reuters.

“They call from six in the morning to 12 at night,” John Arnet, general manager of 716 Limousine in Buffalo, N.Y., said. “We’ve had so many requests for border crossings that we’re turning them down.”

The company now does more business driving Canadians to their homes in Ontario than with U.S. clients.

A taxi trip across the border can cost around $200 or $250 compared with a threeday hotel stay of more than $1,200, Canadian travel insurance broker Martin Firestone said.

With the Canada-u.s. land border mostly closed for more than a year due to the pandemic, and overall tourism down, the recent surge in business has come as a relief to some struggling taxi operators.

Nick Boccio, general manager of Buffalo Limousines, said the Canadian clientele has helped the company bring back chauffeurs.

On Friday, Boccio said the company gave nine different rides to Canadian passengers on just one flight from Florida.

Canada has imposed tough restrictio­ns since the start of the pandemic, including a ban on most foreigners from entering the country. Canadians can fly out of the country and return either by land or air.

But concerns are mounting due to a surge in virus variants, with the once temporary hotel quarantine now mandatory for air travellers through late May, and a ban on direct flights from India and Pakistan.

Firestone said some of his clients who spent the winter in Florida are returning by land to avoid hotels. Some get rides; others who usually get their cars shipped are driving them north.

“Every single limousine company has got on the bandwagon,” Firestone said.

Non-commercial land border crossings were 60 per cent higher during one week at the end of March and beginning of April than in the same week in 2020, according to data from the Canada Border Services Agency.

Air travel for that same week, meanwhile, increased 18.8 per cent.

 ?? LINDSAY DEDARIO / REUTERS ?? General manager and chauffeur with Buffalo Limousine Nick Boccio arrives at Buffalo Niagara Internatio­nal Airport
last week to pick up a Canadian client to drive them home in the midst of COVID-19 travel restrictio­ns.
LINDSAY DEDARIO / REUTERS General manager and chauffeur with Buffalo Limousine Nick Boccio arrives at Buffalo Niagara Internatio­nal Airport last week to pick up a Canadian client to drive them home in the midst of COVID-19 travel restrictio­ns.

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