From the CBC:
“Here's how the new arrival
testing system will work for foreign travellers from non-U.S. destinations”
Health Minister Jean-Yves Duclos
sought today to clarify complicated new COVID-19-related travel requirements,
saying that all passengers coming from non-U.S. foreign destinations will soon
have to undergo mandatory testing on arrival. Alarmed by the new omicron
coronavirus variant, the federal government announced this week it would make
these incoming passengers get another COVID-19 test when they arrive in Canada.
This new test is in addition to the pre-departure molecular test that all
travellers must undergo before leaving for Canada. While Duclos had said the
program would take effect immediately, airport operators told CBC News and
other media outlets that they had few details from Ottawa about how this
program would be implemented. Days after it was set to take effect, Health
Canada's website still makes no mention of the new mandatory arrival testing. Speaking
to reporters on Parliament Hill today, Duclos said the mandatory arrival
testing program is starting to roll out.
Here's how the arrival testing
regime will work, as described by Duclos:
Travellers coming from
non-U.S. foreign destinations need an arrival test Once a fully vaccinated
passenger arrives at a Canadian airport from a non-U.S. foreign destination,
they will either be swabbed by a public health nurse or get a take-home test.
That traveller must then self-isolate at home or at their designated
quarantine destination (such as a hotel) while they await the results of the
test. It may take up to three days to get a result. If that traveller
gets a negative result, they're free to leave self-isolation and move about as
they normally would. If the test is positive, they must stay in quarantine for
14 days. If a passenger has a connecting flight, they get swabbed or
collect a take-home test and then continue on to their final destination. If,
for example, an inbound passenger from Hong Kong arrives in Vancouver to catch
a connecting flight to Kelowna, B.C., that traveller would get tested or pick
up their at-home test in Vancouver before proceeding to the connecting flight.
That passenger would then have to self-isolate in Kelowna while they await the
results of the test. Travellers who are given a take-home test
self-administer the test while on a video link with a nurse from a private
company, such as Dynacare, LifeLabs or Switch Health, to make sure it is done
right. The specimen is then sent via courier to a laboratory. The instructions
are included in the testing kit handed out at the airport. The federal government
is covering all of the costs associated with arrival testing. Canadian
returning from 10 countries included in restrictions related to the omicron
variant are subject to different, additional quarantine and testing
requirements.
Travellers coming directly
from the U.S. are exempt – for now None of these testing requirements apply
to fully vaccinated travellers coming directly from a destination in the U.S.
For example, a fully vaccinated traveller flying non-stop from Fort
Lauderdale, Florida to Montreal would only have to do the pre-departure
molecular test 72 hours before departing for Canada. They would not need to
subject themselves to an arrival test upon landing in Montreal. Duclos
said the U.S. policy may change in time. "With COVID-19, we want to
protect, as best as possible, people's health and safety," he said.
"If we have to impose additional measures at the border, we will."
The arrival testing regime does apply, however, if a traveller coming from
abroad connects at a U.S. airport to a flight for a Canadian destination. For
example, if a passenger from Paris arrives in Atlanta to meet a flight destined
for Toronto, that traveller would be treated the same as a traveller on a
non-stop flight from Paris to Toronto — meaning they would need to go through
the mandatory arrival testing process.
There are separate, much more
stringent requirements for unvaccinated Canadian travellers returning home from
abroad. Generally speaking, only fully vaccinated foreign nationals are allowed
to enter Canada. "Let me be very clear. All travellers should be
expected to be tested on arrival. We will not be able to test every targeted
traveller overnight. It will take a few days," Duclos said. Duclos said
the federal government is working with labs and provincial health authorities
to ramp up the testing capacity required to process the tens of thousands of
travellers who arrive in Canada from abroad every month. The minister said lab
capacity set aside to process these tests has increased by 50 per cent since
Wednesday, allowing technicians to run tests at a faster pace.
Airports call on feds to rely
on take-home tests Duclos said arrival testing will be uneven to start —
some airports will be better equipped to swab passengers while other, more
congested facilities will need time to set aside the space to launch this
massive new public health operation. The airport operators are pushing
Ottawa to rely on take-home tests. Daniel-Robert Gooch, the president of
the Canadian Airports Council, the organization that represents many of the
country's airports, said it's simply not feasible to test all incoming
passengers in the arrival halls of the country's largest airports. "The
use of off-site tests, such as take-home tests, will be essential to making it
work. Our members have told us it would not be possible to process 100 per cent
of all non-U.S. international travellers on-site," he said. Gooch
said Canada's airports are questioning just how safe it is to cram thousands of
passengers into a confined area of an airport not purpose-built for health
procedures. He said their preference is for travellers to take these tests
"in the safety and comfort of their own home or other destination."
^ This is a little more clearer,
but there will still be a lot of confusion for Canadians and Foreigners. ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/arrival-testing-regime-explainer-1.6272919
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