From the CBC:
“Dozens of
airline passengers in Canada hit with fines, warning letters for refusing to
wear a mask”
Dozens of
passengers on Canadian airlines have been slapped with fines or warning letters
by Transport Canada in recent months for refusing to wear a mask on board a
flight, with more incidents involving Alberta airports than any other province.
A review of Transport Canada data by CBC News reveals that WestJet passengers
have been the hardest hit — with 50 of the 72 incidents, or nearly 70 per cent,
involving passengers on the Calgary-based airline. WestJet passengers were
issued eight of the nine fines, known as administrative monetary penalties,
meted out since June. The ninth fine was to a passenger who flew from Vancouver
to Whitehorse on Air North in August.
Transport
Canada has issued 12 warning letters to passengers on Air Canada flights, two
to Jazz passengers and two to people on Air Transat flights, while Air North,
Calm Air, Flair, KLM and Swoop each had one passenger who received a warning
letter. While Transport Canada provided information in September on the amounts
of the first two fines levied — one in June for $1,000 and another in July for
the same amount — it would only provide ranges for the amounts of most of the
fines. Overall, two people were fined between $100 and $500, five received
fines ranging from $501 to $1,000, one passenger was handed a fine that ranged
from $1,001 to $1,500 and another was hit with a fine of between $1,501 and
$2,000. Another 63 passengers have received warning letters. While the warning
letters don't lead directly to fines, Transport Canada spokesperson Sau Sau Liu
said they can result in higher fines for a second offence. "Based on
Transport Canada's graduated approach to enforcement action, when warranted by
the results of an investigation where mitigating factors are taken into
consideration, a first offence may result in a letter of warning," she
said. "The letter serves as a reminder of the consequences the offender
may face should the infraction be committed again in the future. Should a
second or subsequent violation occur for the same offence/violation, Transport
Canada's process would trigger an enhanced level of enforcement action, which
could result in a penalty of up to $5,000." But if there is evidence of
"aggravating factors, such as blatant and repeated refusals to
comply," combined with such things as disrespectful or abusive language,
physical or verbal threats, a first offence can result in a fine and even
criminal charges, Liu said.
WestJet has
'zero-tolerance' mask policy While Alberta has 11.5 per cent of Canada's
population, 36.8 per cent of the incidents occurred on flights to or from an
Alberta airport. Calgary's airport — which is a WestJet hub and is Canada's
fourth largest — was involved in 37 incidents, while Edmonton's airport was
involved in 14. In Ontario, which has 38.2 per cent of the country's
residents, incidents on flights to or from the province's airports made up for
23.6 per cent of the total. According to the data, Toronto's Pearson
International Airport, which has more traffic than any other Canadian airport,
was the departure or arrival point in 30 incidents. British Columbia was
involved in 19.4 per cent of incidents. While 18 incidents involved flights
going to or from Vancouver International Airport, there were also incidents
involving flights that visited Kelowna (4), Kamloops (1), Abbotsford (3), Comox
(1) and Terrace (1). Only five
incidents involved passengers flying to Canada from international airports —
two from London's Gatwick Airport, two from Paris and one from Israel. WestJet
spokesperson Morgan Bell said the airline adopted a zero-tolerance policy on
mask-wearing in September. "Our approach is zero-tolerance, as
Canadian travellers and all of our WestJet Group employees are counting on us
to keep them safe," she said, pointing out that WestJet has flown more
than 28,000 flights and more than a million passengers since the pandemic
began. "Travellers must understand if they choose to not wear a
mask, they are choosing not to fly our airlines." Bell said WestJet
has issued 34 red cards to passengers who refused to wear masks on board —
barring them from flights on WestJet, WestJet Encore and Swoop for a year.
Another 121 passengers received yellow warning cards.
Air Canada
spokesperson Peter Fitzpatrick said the airline has complied with reporting
obligations and worked with Transport Canada during its investigations. Air
Canada was one of the first airlines to require face coverings and recently
strengthened its policy to improve the safety of passengers and crew members,
he said."For customers eligible for a face-covering exemption, as of Dec.
15, 2020, they will also need to present a negative COVID-19 test taken within
72 hours from departure, at the airport check-in and/or prior to boarding the
flight," he wrote in an email. "They may need another negative
COVID-19 test for their return journey if the departure of their return trip
exceeds 72 hours from the time the initial test was taken." Wesley
Lesosky, president of the Air Canada component of the Canadian Union of Public
Employees, said he hears from his members almost every day about cases where a
passenger didn't want to wear a mask. "It's a health and safety concern to
all, but it's their work environment, and they need to be safe when they're in
their work environment. And if they feel unsafe because somebody doesn't have a
mask, they're not required to put themselves in that particular
situation."
^ If people do
not wear a mask and it is required then they should get a warning the first
time and a fine any other time after that. If they continue to refuse or become
abusive then they should be arrested and charged (for the abuse) and fined (for
not wearing a mask.) ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/airline-passengers-masks-fines-covid-1.5850825
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