Toronto Star

Canadian retirees in U.S. hope for prompt COVID boosters

Many snowbirds aren’t waiting for Ottawa, health officials to make call on third vaccine shot

- JAMES MCCARTEN

WASHINGTON—Canadian snowbirds will be watching closely this week, suitcases at the ready and RVs full of fuel, to see if the United States finally eases the travel restrictio­ns preventing them from driving south for the winter.

Some aren’t waiting for the White House, opting for the perfectly legal option of flying to the U.S. instead — and many are planning on getting a

COVID-19 booster shot as soon as they get there, said Toronto travel insurance broker Martin Firestone.

“The feeling I’m getting from my clientele is, ‘I will go down south as I always had planned to, but I will get my third booster shot down there and probably get it a lot quicker than I ever would waiting here,’ ” Firestone said in an interview. “People who are heading south are going to go get that booster down in the States, I can assure you of that.”

On Friday, the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion turned a few heads

when it rejected the idea of a third shot for Americans aged 16 or older. The agency did, however, endorse a plan to make boosters available to people aged 65 or older, or at high risk of severe illness.

With Canada still a long way from formally deciding whether to offer boosters, many with U.S. travel plans simply don’t want to wait for the federal health authoritie­s and the individual provinces to make up their minds, Firestone said.

Others are waiting for the U.S. to give a green light to getting behind the wheel.

The U.S. has largely remained silent on when it might begin to ease the restrictio­ns. Air and sea travellers are exempt from the ban, though passengers by rail, ferry and pleasure boat are not.

A fresh batch of U.S. Senate Democrats, including Michigan senators Debbie Stabenow and Gary Peters, Sen. Kirsten Gillebrand

of New York and New Hampshire Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, wrote Friday to urge President Joe Biden to finally lift the ban.

“We believe that fully vaccinated Canadians should be allowed to safely travel into the United States via land ports of entry,” reads the letter, which was also signed by New Hampshire Sen. Maggie Hassan, and Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar and Sen. Angus King, the Independen­t from Maine.

“We urge you to lift these restrictio­ns before October, provide a plan for reopening land ports of entry and appoint an interagenc­y lead on U.S.-Canadian border restrictio­ns related to the COVID-19 pandemic.”

Establishi­ng a liaison between the various agencies, the White House and Congress would help to ensure the issue gets the necessary attention and ensure lawmakers are kept in the loop, it continues.

“An interagenc­y lead would facilitate discussion­s between the administra­tion and our offices and ensure that we are able to effectivel­y convey the concerns of our constituen­ts as you evaluate the COVID-19 pandemic.”

Homeland Security Sec. Alejandro Mayorkas, whose department oversees the U.S. border agency, acknowledg­ed the growing frustratio­n during a National Press Club event last week in Washington.

“We had hoped that by now, we would have opened up travel through the ports of entry, but regrettabl­y, because of the Delta variant, we’ve been delayed in doing so,” Mayorkas said.

The restrictio­ns now include language that make it possible to relax or lift the ban entirely before the start of the next 30day window, he added.

“Because we’ve renewed it for 30 days does not necessaril­y mean that the restrictio­n will last for another 30 days,” Mayorkas said. “We have the ability, of course, to ease it or to eliminate it sooner if the data suggests that we should.”

He also acknowledg­ed the southern border, scene of an escalating immigratio­n crisis, is complicati­ng matters. The department sent 400 more border agents and officers to the south Texas region where upwards of 14,000 migrants from Haiti have gathered, with more arriving daily, in hopes of winning asylum in the U.S.

Some experts say the crisis at the U.S.-Mexico border is making the White House wary about easing travel restrictio­ns, particular­ly when travel from Canada is still possible via air and trade and commercial shipments have been moving largely unfettered since the start of the pandemic.

But there are families at the southern border who are suffering under the restrictio­ns as well, said Devon Weber, the founder of Let Us Reunite, a grassroots advocacy group that’s pushing for the borders to be reopened. “We cannot let migrants be used as a scapegoat for the government’s bureaucrat­ic paralysis regarding land border policy,” Weber said in an email. “There is a difference between immigratio­n and opening the border to casual travel. The United States had 18 months to make a plan to safely reopen all the land borders and has chosen not to.”

Firestone said older travellers want a vehicle at their disposal while in the U.S., and prefer to avoid the hassle of air travel, particular­ly since Canada’s decision to allow fully vaccinated visitors has dramatical­ly slowed what was already a plodding and delay-filled customs clearance process.

“We’re hearing stories about three-hour waits on the plane on the tarmac, and then another two-hour wait in the building,” he said. “Flying is not what it used to be.”

 ?? LARS HAGBERG AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO ?? The U.S. has largely remained silent on when it might begin to ease restrictio­ns on non-essential land crossings at the Canadian border.
LARS HAGBERG AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO The U.S. has largely remained silent on when it might begin to ease restrictio­ns on non-essential land crossings at the Canadian border.

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