From Reuters:
“U.S.-Canada towns marooned by
border closure brace for winter trapped in isolation”
They are small towns along the
Canadian-American border, marooned by geography, whose residents' lives have
already been upended by the border closure due to the coronavirus pandemic. But
with winter approaching, residents of Campobello Island in Canada's Atlantic
province of New Brunswick and the small U.S. town of Point Roberts in
Washington state are bracing for continued isolation adding to winter blues,
exposing how tightly intertwined are communities that straddle an international
border. Campobello Island, located off the coast of the U.S. state of Maine, is
accessible only by a private ferry service that runs during the summer or by
driving through Maine, which connects to the island via a bridge. The lack of
easy access to the rest of Canada has long been an issue, but is compounded by
the pandemic, said Justin Tinker, 34, a civil engineer whose family has lived
on Campobello Island for 10 generations. Residents of the island have to pass
through the United States to go to a hospital on the Canadian mainland, but
they now could wind up being turned away from the hospital because they've been
to the U.S. within the last two weeks, Tinker said. "Campobello's always
come together when it needs to, but there's anxiety," said Tinker, who
blames the province for dragging its feet on the lack of a solution. "Once
that ferry stops running we can't get to Campobello Island within our own
province."
Across the continent, Point
Roberts, a town of around 1,300 year-round residents in Washington state, sits
on the tip of Canada's Tsawwassen Peninsula. Its proximity to Canada has made
the local economy reliant on Canadian visitors, but also means that locals rely
on an open border to access healthcare and other facilities. "We have five
gas stations. We don't have five gas stations for 1,000 people," said
Christopher Carleton, fire chief for Point Roberts, explaining the reliance on
Canadians, who cross the border to buy gas that is roughly a third cheaper.
KIDS AND ISOLATION Carleton
has been raising the alarm about an impending mental health crisis among
residents in Point Roberts as their isolation looks likely to drag on into the
winter. His efforts bring more attention to the plight of Point Roberts
residents, though pressure on state and federal politicians hasn't paid off so
far. Washington state Governor Jay Inslee wrote to Canadian Prime
Minister Justin Trudeau in August, asking him to address the "unique
hardships" faced by Point Roberts residents. Beth Calder, 48, manages
Point to Point Parcel, a package receiving business mainly serving Canadians
who drive to Point Roberts to collect parcels, dodging expensive or unavailable
international shipping. "Without the Canadians coming down and
using our service, it's crippling our company," Calder said, citing a 90%
drop in business as soon as the border closed. She described life in
Point Roberts during the pandemic as "eerie." "If we
can't get back to what was the normal, I don't see how we can survive,"
she said. Sandra Procter, 52, another Point Roberts resident, said she
has cried every day since she and her husband made the decision to send their
16-year-old son to live with friends on the Canadian side of the border in late
August so he can continue attending school in Vancouver, British Columbia.
Point Roberts' school only goes up to Grade 3, after which age children attend
schools in Washington or Canada. Although education was considered an
essential reason to cross the border in June, when schools in British Columbia
reopened, that's no longer the case. Public Safety Canada said the
policy barring Americans from crossing the border for school will remain in
place as long as the border closure continues. The U.S.-Canada border is closed
for non-essential travel until Sept. 21. The change in policy "came
out of the blue," Procter said. "For the mental health of a
16-year-old, being as isolated as he is here, it's not healthy. "We're
not asking for the border to be opened up, we're just asking that our kids' education
is considered essential."
^ Canada has taken to going over-board
with all of this. Not only do they continue to isolate themselves from the US
and the rest of the world, but they also continue to isolate themselves from
each other with the Provinces and Territories banning travel. It is wrong to doing
nothing to prevent Covid-19 and it is wrong to do too much to prevent Covid-19
(especially months later.) The Politicians in Ottawa and in the different
Provinces don’t care about the American and Canadian border towns that literally
rely on each other for basic survival (like Campobello Island.) I’ve been to
Campobello and can only imagine how the Canadians there are struggling and also
how they have been abandoned by their own Government. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/news/u-canada-towns-marooned-border-130547876.html
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