From the CBC:
“Travellers to Canada doubled
after border reopened to Americans”
(While the Canadian border
reopened to American citizens and permanent residents on Aug. 9, the U.S. land
border remains closed.)
The number of people crossing the
land border into Canada more than doubled in the first week fully vaccinated
Americans were once again allowed to enter the country for non-essential
travel. According to Canadian government statistics, 218,732 non-commercial
travellers entered Canada by land from Aug. 9-15. The number, which includes
both Canadians and Americans, was a 111 per cent increase from 103,344
travellers the week before, when the border was still closed to Americans, and
a nearly 200 per cent increase over the 74,562 people who crossed during that
same week in 2020. It pales, however, in comparison to the 1.4 million
travellers who entered Canada that week in 2019, before the start of the
COVID-19 pandemic.
At the regional level, the
government didn't break down the numbers between non-commercial travellers and
the number of truck drivers, which rose slightly that week. Including
commercial drivers, who have been allowed into Canada throughout the pandemic,
a total of 332,581 people crossed the border. The region with the greatest
number of people who crossed for commercial or non-commercial reasons was
Ontario, which accounted for 206,783 of those who entered from the U.S — up 54
per cent from the previous week. According to the statistics the number of
Canadians returning to the country nudged up to 111,210 from 101,214 the week
before, but the number of "foreign nationals" nearly tripled to
95,573 from 32,520. The Pacific region had the next largest number of
travellers that week, with commercial and non-commercial crossings into Canada
rising 79 per cent to 52,875 from 29,530. While the number of Canadians rose to
20,579 from 17,492, the number of foreign nationals nearly tripled, to 32,296
from 12,038.
The biggest percentage increase
in travellers was in the Atlantic region, where commercial and non-commercial
traffic rose 89 per cent, from 8,282 to 15,711. While the number of Canadians
rose slightly to 5,981 from 5,234, the number of foreign nationals more than
tripled to 9,730 from 3,048. In Quebec, the number of commercial and
non-commercial travellers rose 66.4 per cent, from 20,278 to 33,758. Again,
there was a small increase in the number of Canadians to 15,768 from 14,018,
while the number of non-Canadians nearly tripled to 17,990 from 6,260. The
Prairies had the smallest percentage increase that week, up only 31.6 per cent
to 23,454 from 17,819 commercial and non-commercial travellers. While the
number of Canadians rose to 12,982 from 11,989 the previous week, the number of
foreign nationals nearly doubled to 10,471 from 5,830.
The statistics also show an
increase in the number of people who flew into Canada in that same period —
179,939 versus 138,257 the week before — a 30 per cent overall increase. But
while the number of Canadian citizens flying into Canada was up 13.8 per cent,
to 109,216, the number of "other foreign nationals" was up 67 per
cent, to 70,723. The same week a year ago, only 46,506 people flew into Canada,
down sharply from pre-pandemic levels of 783,790 in that week in 2019.
On July 19, the Canadian
government announced that it would open its border to fully vaccinated U.S.
citizens and permanent residents who also had a negative PCR COVID test taken
within 72 hours of crossing the border. On Sept. 7 that will open up further to
include fully vaccinated travellers from other countries. In the initial hours
after the Canadian land border opened, there were long lines of cars and long
waits at some border crossings as travellers jumped at the opportunity to come
to Canada. Reasons for crossing varied widely. While some headed north for
long-awaited reunions with family or friends, others came for tourism or to
visit their cottages.
The United States, however,
hasn't reciprocated. While Canadians have been allowed since the beginning of
the pandemic to fly in to the U.S., the Department of Homeland Security
announced last week that the U.S. land border will remain closed until Sept. 21,
citing COVID transmission rates in the U.S. and the delta variant. In recent
weeks, the map from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control (CDC) showing
community transmission across the country has grown redder by the day as county
after county has moved into the category of high rates of COVID-19
transmission. The vast majority of counties that border Canada are now in the
category of high or substantial COVID-19 community transmission. Across the
United States, 90 per cent of counties are now in the category of high COVID-19
community transmission. According to the CDC, 51.6 per cent of U.S. residents
are fully vaccinated. While northern U.S. politicians and business leaders have
called for the U.S. to follow Canada's lead and reopen its land border, the
Homeland Security's attaché in its Canadian embassy said during a conference
last week that public health data was key in the decision in July to keep the
U.S. land border closed. "What really loomed large was the spread of the
delta variant and all the unknowns about that, as well as trends on domestic
public health dealing with things like vaccination rates, hospitalization
rates, new infection rates," Ted Sobel told the annual summit meeting of
the Pacific NorthWest Economic Region. "So those are the things that we're
looking at very closely."
^ As a Dual Canadian-American
Citizen I’m glad that the Canadian Government finally opened its borders to
vaccinated Americans. The American Government continuing to keep its borders
closed to vaccinated Canadians is a major issue that needs to be changed immediately
(another one of Biden’s failures.) ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/canada-us-border-travel-1.6152092
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