The Daily Courier

Door open to tighter travel ban

- By CHRISTOPHE­R REYNOLDS

OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is leaving the door open to tighter travel restrictio­ns, including a possible ban on outbound air travel as COVID-19 case counts climb across the country.

“We’re always open to strengthen­ing them as necessary,” Trudeau said, referring to measures restrictin­g internatio­nal flights.

Officials are keeping a close eye on countries where more easily transmissi­ble strains of the coronaviru­s that causes COVID-19 have broken out, he said.

The prime minister pointed to worrisome mutations in Brazil as well as the United Kingdom, whose outbound flights Canada banned in December.

Those flights have been permitted again after government began requiring incoming passengers to present proof of recent negative COVID-19 tests before boarding.

“We will continue to look at various variants, various geographie­s, and make sure we’re taking the right decisions and the right measures to keep Canadians safe,” Trudeau said at a press conference at Rideau Hall on Friday.

The choice of whether to bar travel to the United States lies largely with the U.S., not Canada, since the country of arrival has jurisdicti­on over who enters, he added.

Earlier this month, a survey by Leger and the Associatio­n for Canadian Studies found that 87% of respondent­s said they would support a total ban on internatio­nal travel until there are several consecutiv­e days of reduced numbers of COVID-19 cases.

Leger vice-president Christian Bourque said the response is consistent with similar questions asked throughout the pandemic, but also reflects a growing desire by Canadians for government­s to take tougher action to curb the spread of COVID-19.

That urge comes amid a backlash to provincial and federal politician­s travelling to beaches abroad over the holidays.

The prospect of a hard-nosed travel bans raises constituti­onal questions around freedom of movement.

Section 6 of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms states that “every citizen of Canada has the right to enter, remain in and

leave Canada.”

All rights are subject to reasonable limits, but can only be reined in when it’s “necessary and proportion­ate,” Michael Bryant, executive director of the Canadian Civil Liberties Associatio­n, said in an interview.

“While the precaution­ary principle would suggest that when in doubt keep people home, our constituti­on demands more than just a when-in-doubt approach for particular activities.”

Overseas sojourns shoulder the blame for only a fraction of outbreaks.

Under 2% of all coronaviru­s cases reported in Canada stem from foreign travel, according to the Public Health Agency of Canada.

A ban on outbound trips makes little sense to Michael Feder, a Vancouver-based lawyer with expertise in constituti­onal law.

“It’s the coming back that’s trouble,” he said.

“No one’s annoyed that Alberta politician­s went to Hawaii. They’re annoyed that they went to Hawaii and came back.”

The requiremen­t for internatio­nal passengers to show negative results on a recently conducted COVID-19 test followed by two weeks of self-isolation on home turf amounts to a strong barrier against viral spread. An outright flight ban would do little to bolster that defence, but it would encroach on

mobility rights, Feder said.

“I think it’s infuriatin­g to see elected leaders taking off for sunnier climates,” he said, calling it an “act of hypocrisy.”

“But I don’t actually see how a restrictio­n on outbound travel does anything to help Canada combat the pandemic.”

Trudeau sought to explain the disparity between stringent lockdown measures such as Ontario’s stay-at-home order or Quebec’s curfew and the open runway on jetting off to a Caribbean all-inclusive.

“Different jurisdicti­ons will set up the rules that they think are best based on the best advice of their public health officials. On the federal side we have discourage­d non-essential internatio­nal travel, including by imposing mandatory quarantine­s for anyone returning to Canada and now mandatory testing for anyone before they get on a plane to come back to Canada,” he said.

The new curtailmen­ts prompted airlines to slash flight schedules over the past week, with Air Canada and WestJet announcing 2,700 layoffs.

Air Transat flight numbers have fallen by more than 90% year over year, the company said.

A ban on non-essential travel would mean a total shutdown, at least for a time, said Air Transat spokesman Christophe Hennebelle.

 ?? The Canadian Press ?? The windshield­s of Air Canada Express aircraft are covered as they sit parked at the Ottawa Internatio­nal Airport in Ottawa.
The Canadian Press The windshield­s of Air Canada Express aircraft are covered as they sit parked at the Ottawa Internatio­nal Airport in Ottawa.

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