From the CBC:
“New
COVID-19 testing rules for air travellers kick in Jan. 7”
New rules
requiring air travellers to test negative for COVID-19 before entering Canada
will kick in on Jan. 7, Transport Minister Marc Garneau said today. The new
requirement, announced Wednesday, covers all air passengers five years of age
or older. Under the new rule, travellers must receive a negative result on a
polymerase chain reaction (PCR) test — the standard nose swab test for
detecting active COVID-19 infections — within 72 hours of boarding a flight to
Canada. There are two possible outcomes for passengers who fail to obtain PCR
tests prior to departure, Garneau said in an interview with CBC News. "One
is, if they haven't got the test result and there are clinics available, they
will have to reschedule their departure because they won't be allowed on
board," he said. "If, on the other hand, they can demonstrate ...
that there was no facility, then they can be admitted onboard." Travellers
who can prove that they were unable to get a test abroad will have to
quarantine for 14 days at a federally-approved facility upon their arrival. Documentation
of a negative test result must be presented to the airline prior to boarding a
flight to Canada, according to a government news release. "One of the
things that we're trying to do is to provide information on the locations where
testing is provided in the different foreign countries," Garneau said.
"At the same time ... counterfeiting unfortunately sometimes happens and
you can't totally cover every base."
Airline
industry frustrated by timeline The minister said foreign and domestic
airlines have the next seven days to implement the policy, a timeframe Garneau
said was enough to comply with the new requirements. "I know that
we've been talking with the airlines, and they will rise to the occasion on
this new requirement for pre-departure testing," he said. But the
president and CEO of the National Airlines Council of Canada, which represents
the country's largest carriers, said one week isn't enough time. "Our
primary concerns are the timeframe, the extremely tight timeframe, and the lack
of information and guidance as to what we are going to be obligated to
do," Mike McNaney told CBC News in a separate interview. "Implementation
of a broad policy like this is a very complex activity. You obviously have to
have communication to your own front-line employees around the world. You have
to work with regulators and other jurisdictions. "We do not know
what will be deemed to be properly certified testing labs to provide results.
We do not know the acceptable format for passengers to provide the information
and be in compliance with the government policy. We do not have regulation and
we do not have guidance material at all." It's frustrating, said
McNaney, because the airline industry has been pushing for more testing. "There's a great level of frustration
within the industry in terms of how we are now proceeding in this very rushed
fashion," he said. Garneau
said airlines have shown they're able to quickly handle "sudden
situations" brought on by the COVID-19 pandemic.
John Gradek, a
former Air Canada executive and lecturer at McGill University's global aviation
leadership program, said the swift introduction of a new testing policy is
likely adding pressure to an already strained relationship between the federal
government and the airline industry — which has been pleading for a pandemic
bailout. "While [the government hasn't] said it's forbidden by law, they
strongly recommend people not travel. And industry is basically saying, come on
down, the flights are open, weather's nice, it's nice and warm in the sunny
Caribbean," he said. "Christmas is a very, very important time of
year for carriers to be able to fill their airplanes and make some money and
that's what they're doing." Gradek said more communication with the
airlines could have helped smooth things over. "You're seeing a lot of
angst and … a lot of potential distrust between the carriers and Transport
Canada and that's got to stop," he said. "We've got to really make
sure that we're looking at doing this thing as an industry, as a regulator, and
making sure we're both looking at the same issue and talking on the same sides
of our mouth when we talk about policy. We can't keep going with this … tussle
going on between Transport Canada and the aviation industry."
Conservatives
voice concern In response to the
announcement, the Official Opposition accused the Liberal government of
introducing more "instability" to Canada's embattled airline
industry. "The Liberals' new bright idea is to have international
airline workers with no ties to Canada act as COVID-19 screening agents,"
read a media statement from Conservative critics Michelle Rempel Garner,
Stephanie Kusie and Pierre-Paul Hus. "The
lack of rationale, clarity and confusion created by the Liberal government's
half-baked announcement leaves airline workers and Canadians abroad in
limbo." In an interview with CBC News, Rempel Garner said the
announcement was "half-baked" and a "little ridiculous"
since it's now up to airlines to check if people have been tested. She
accused the Liberals of rushing the new requirements out the door quickly in
reaction to headlines, including the news about Ontario MPP Rod Phillips going
on a Caribbean vacation over the holidays. She said there are still too many
unanswered logistical questions about how the rules will work abroad. "What
constitutes a PCR test? How is that being certified? Are Canadian airline
workers supposed to become border service agents?" Nearly 2,000
travellers enrolled in Alberta's COVID-19 border testing pilot project that can
reduce quarantine Rempel Garner said the Conservatives and industry
officials have been calling on the federal government for months to test at
Canadian airports by expanding a pilot project in Alberta. The pilot
program, a partnership between Alberta and the federal government, allows
eligible international travellers to take a COVID-19 test at one of two border
crossings in the province — the Calgary International Airport and the Coutts
land border crossing. Should tests come back negative, travellers can
leave quarantine as long as they remain in Alberta for the first 14 days. They
must also get a second test six or seven days after arrival at a participating
community pharmacy.
Travellers
must arrange tests themselves On Wednesday, Intergovernmental Affairs
Minister Dominic LeBlanc said it will be up to travellers to arrange for PCR
tests themselves, given that those embarking on non-essential trips overseas
have chosen already to flout public health guidelines. "The
government of Canada obviously is not in a position to set up in hotels or
all-inclusive resorts or Canadian consulates," he told CBC News. The
new rule does not replace Canada's mandatory 14-day quarantine period for
international travellers, which remains in force. Garneau also said
Thursday the government will be boosting its surveillance efforts to make sure
travellers are following the rules. The penalties for breaking the Quarantine
Act can include six months in prison or $750,000 in fines. Bloc
Québécois Leader Yves-Francois Blanchet said Thursday that the testing
requirement should apply to all travellers, not just those arriving by air. In
a media statement, he also said the government should reimburse those who have
had to cancel vacations due to the pandemic. The federal change came a day before
Ontario Finance Minister Rod Phillips resigned after returning from a
controversial Caribbean vacation while the province is under strict lockdown
measures that discourage non-essential travel.
^ I’ve written
about this before, but now the Federal Government announced the date these
tests will be required. I am all for having passengers show a negative Covid-19
test to board flights. I am against the Canadian Federal Government (or any
Government) mandating them and forcing people to scramble to find a way to get the
tests done on their own. The Canadian Government should be working with
airlines, airports and passengers (not against them) and giving us the
information we need to travel safely. If there is a testing requirement then
any airport that has direct flight connections to Canada should provide
Covid-19 Tests – even if for you have to pay for it – and you should be allowed
to use those test results when you land in Canada. Simply making laws and causing
disruptions and chaos is not the sign of a good and stable Government. ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/garneau-negative-test-airline-1.5858379
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