From the CBC:
“How border restrictions have
left a U.S. community stranded and surrounded by Canada”
An idyllic community of soaring
pines and seaside vistas feels like a one-of-a-kind nature preserve on the West
Coast, filled with a particular subset of people who roam regularly across the
Canada-U.S. border for love, livelihood and everyday life. Now their migration patterns are disrupted.
And after 16 months of restrictions on Canada-U.S. travel, residents of Point
Roberts, Wash., sound like they've just about had it. This place is a perfect spot to gauge the mood
of people whose lives criss-cross the international border, thanks to a freak
of geography that's created an unusually high concentration of such people
here.
Imagine a severed appendage of
the United States, glued onto Canada's hip — that's this place. It's a
peninsula tip that would be a Vancouver suburb, were it not for an
international border; instead, it's a quiet American getaway. Residents of this
verdant maritime getaway have waited in vain, month, after month, for the end
of border restrictions that have them imprisoned in paradise. The place has no pharmacy. The closest one is
across Roosevelt Road in British Columbia. Residents habitually cross the
border to get medicine; to see doctors; even in some cases to see their
spouses, as some couples keep homes apart for reasons of work or citizenship. It's such a tightly knit binational community
that residents did something very unusual on the Fourth of July: dozens went to
protest at the border, reached across it to hold hands with Canadian friends,
and, on American Independence Day, joined in a rendition of O Canada.
(People on the Fourth of July
protested at the border, shaking hands with friends on the Canadian side, left,
waving U.S. and Canadian flags, singing O Canada, and hoisting protest signs.)
The gas stations here list prices
in metric litres for Canadians. Businesses rely on Canadians as the local
population of 800 multiplies five times on summer weekends, when visitors drop
in from Vancouver. Those businesses are
now being wiped out; some closed, and surviving ones say they're barely
clinging on, with revenues evaporating. The community's main source of food —
its only grocery store — is threatening to close. Canadians' summer homes lie empty; some are
overrun with vines.
Caring for empty houses A pair of retired siblings are caring for these properties in Canadians' absence. Jeanette Meursing and her sister are tending to 16 empty homes, spending more than 20 hours per week tidying lawns and gardens. They're doing it for free in most cases, for friends. "I honestly believe that these people, if I needed them, if I was sick or my husband was sick, and I needed help, they would be there to help me," Meursing said in an interview. "I don't think there's one that would say, 'I don't have time for you.'" Her sister Diane Thomas says she's found joy in the process, and shares a dark story to explain her perpetual sunny disposition. She was shot in the face as a baby. A child had found an old, rusted .22-calibre rifle on a construction site in her native South Dakota. It didn't appear to work. When it accidentally, eventually, did go off, she was in its trajectory, and the bullet tore through her mouth into the back of her head. She's lived ever since with a bullet lodged precariously near her brainstem and says she reminds herself each day that her life is a miraculous gift. So here she is now, at age 72, raking a yard surrounded by towering pines, expressing gratitude for being with her sister, safe, in a community that's had few cases of COVID-19 and sky-high vaccination rates. "We're having fun," Thomas said.
How a cartographic freak came
into being
(On the right: a Vancouver suburb
filled with multimillion-dollar homes. On the left: the secluded U.S. getaway
of Point Roberts, where houses cost one-fifth what their Canadian neighbours
do.)
The border restrictions mean
Canadians can't drive down; Americans can't drive up without an essential
reason for travelling, and the definition of essential travel is subject to a
border guard's interpretation. They can't even access the rest of their own
country without the twice-weekly foot ferry that drops them off, without a car,
on the mainland of Washington state. This cartographic aberration resulted from
a U.S.-U.K. deal that drew the border through the 49th parallel, back in 1846
when the area had no permanent settlement. Conversations with Canadian border guards have
left some residents fuming about unclear and arbitrarily applied rules. The
locals even gossip about which border guards are the strictest.
Medical emergencies: At the
guard's discretion
(Pamela Robertson had to have two
teeth removed after a nasty infection. She was prevented twice by Canadian
border agents from entering to see her dentist in 2020.)
Pamela Robertson recounts how
guards brushed off her medical emergency. When the pandemic struck, she had just
completed part of a root canal with her dentist on the Canadian side. For
months, the procedure languished unresolved. Then her gums got infected. Her
face began to swell, with one cheek looking like a red billiard ball. She was refused entry to Canada twice and
asked a guard what it would take to get through. "They looked me straight
in the eye and said, 'You have to be dying,'" she said in an interview.
"I said, "I think I am dying. … "They still wouldn't allow me
through." Finally, she got in on a
third attempt; but she was ordered into a 14-day quarantine before she could
see her dentist. She said had a fever and was dizzy by the final day.
Eventually, she got surgery, and had to have two teeth removed. "I lost
two of my teeth," she said, "because of … COVID and the stupid
Canadian rules."
Another local man was
diagnosed with glaucoma.
(Brian Calder tells the story of
how a Canadian border guard refused to let him through for a scheduled glaucoma
surgery that the guard deemed non-essential.)
Brian Calder, 80, says his
Canadian doctor warned that he could lose vision in his left eye within six to
12 months without surgery. By March, he
was fully vaccinated and, on the day he was to have surgery, drove to the
border with a medical note. "And
[the guard] says, 'That's not essential,'" Calder said. "And I say,
'Well, what's essential?' [He replies]: 'You've got to be dying.'" He's a
dual Canadian-American citizen. Calder
says the guard informed him that he can't, as a Canadian, be denied entry into
Canada, but that if he tried driving to the doctor's he would get a $3,000
fine, be forced into a hotel, and have to pay for quarantine for two weeks. He finally
managed to find a new doctor in the U.S., and get an appointment scheduled on
the U.S. mainland, which residents can get to by car for medical emergencies if
they drive straight through Canada without stopping. "It's not
humane," Calder says of the border situation. "It's disciplinarian.
It's bullying."
Fortunately, emergency services
are allowed to cross. The local fire department relies on Canadians, who comprise
two-thirds of its 48 firefighters. The fire chief worries about this year's
brutal forest fire season. He also worries
about something more intangible: the frayed human connections. He says members
of his community have missed the deaths and funerals of loved ones.
The toll on families
(A Canadian family, right, visits
with Americans near a border crossing at Memorial Park in Point Roberts, Wash.,
on Tuesday.)
"I do believe we've lost a
piece of humanity [during this pandemic] in the world as a whole," said
Christopher Carleton. "The
harshness and the lack of sympathy for people in particular situations — like a
family death — it should never have happened." The chief performs different roles in the
town, which has no mayor; in fact, it's not even really a town but an
unincorporated adjunct to Washington's Whatcom County. Carleton ran the local
COVID vaccination drive that resulted in 85 percent of residents being fully
vaccinated. One fully vaccinated is desperate to see her family in Canada.
Marlene Calder, Brian's wife, has lost a precious year with her 94-year-old
mother. Her mom's memory is fading. She
wants to be able to drop in a couple of days a week, to help her mom and
relieve the burden on her sisters. "It's heartbreaking," she said.
"It's emotionally, mentally draining to not have contact with them. Not to
see them."
(The initial easing of Canadian
travel rules won't help most people here. But it will help Marlene Calder drop
in to visit her mom.)
She's among the minority who will
be helped by new travel rules taking effect this week. Canada says people already qualified to enter
can now avoid quarantine if they're fully vaccinated, and take tests; that will
allow Calder, a dual citizen, to check in periodically on her mom.
Businesses bleeding money
(Tamra Hansen has a long
international career in the restaurant business. Now she's struggling to keep
her Point Roberts cafe afloat, with revenues down 90 per cent.)
Recreational travel remains
forbidden and that means more pain for tourism-reliant businesses, which means
most of them in Point Roberts. One local merchant says he's burning through his
lifelong savings, having spent millions to build a wine bar, gas station, and UPS facility
intended to supply Canadian visitors. "I
can barely make my utility bills," Fred Pakzad, 76, said. He wishes
government officials could visit this place and see the effect of prolonged
shutdowns. One restaurant owner has had a distinguished career, owning
restaurants in New York and a Michelin-starred spot in France before settling
here to be closer to family. Now Tamra
Hansen says the only reason she's survived is she cooks herself without taking
a salary, and is living off credit now with revenues down 90 per cent. Hansen
says she feels like this pandemic has revealed a lack of empathy for people, in
different ways, in both the U.S. and Canada. "I think it's brought out the worst in
both countries," she said. But she had reason to be happy on the Fourth
of July weekend: Her mother had just arrived from Kelowna, B.C. It took two
days to make a trip that usually takes several hours. It required a car ride to
Vancouver for a COVID-19 test, then another ride to a small regional airport,
then a flight across the border to Bellingham, Wash. — flying is still allowed.
Then she took a ferry boat to Point Roberts. By the end of it all, she was
sitting in her daughter's cafe. Which, in normal times, is just an hour's drive
south of Vancouver.
^ For 1 year and 4 months (and
counting) American towns completely surrounded by Canada and Canadian towns
completely surrounded by the US have suffered even more than anyone else
because of stupid travel restrictions. Some places you literally just have to
walk across the street, but aren't allowed to (not even for food, gas, etc.)
It's time this stupidity (on the part of the Canadian and American Politicians)
stops and the border reopens! ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/point-roberts-border-pandemic-1.6093133
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.