From the CBC:
“B.C. woman fined $5,700 at
border said agents unaware of new travel exemption issued by Canadian
government”
A B.C. woman said Canadian agents
at the Pacific Highway border crossing were unaware of a new federal exemption
introduced for people crossing the border to buy essential supplies. Marlane
Jones thought she was doing the right thing by heading across the border to buy
gas in the U.S. Instead, her 10-minute trip ended with a $5,700 fine and
scolding from Canadian agents at the Pacific Highway border crossing in Surrey,
B.C. "I was in tears. I was a bit frightened. I didn't know what was going
to happen to me," said the 68-year old. Jones said she decided to gas up in Blaine,
Wash., after seeing the news about Ottawa approving an exemption allowing
British Columbians from flood-affected areas to make short trips into the U.S.
for gas or essentials without having to provide a negative PCR test for
COVID-19. The exemption was introduced to help ease supply shortages resulting
from recent extreme rain that washed out highways and rail lines in southwest
B.C., and was announced on Sunday by Minister of Emergency Preparedness Bill
Blair.
But the border agents Jones dealt
with on Monday had no knowledge of it. "[The agent] was quite stern and
said I was violating the [Quarantine] Act because I didn't have the PCR test. I
told her [the regulation] had been changed, but she wasn't buying it,"
said Jones. Jones said, after being sent inside the border enforcement office,
agents there gave her two options: accept the hefty fine or turn around and go
back to Washington state for a PCR test and possible 72-hour wait for results. "They also said I was the ninth person
they had ticketed already early in the morning. I said they should maybe watch
TV and see what we were being told." On Tuesday, Blair admitted there was
some confusion around the exemption. "That direction was given to border
services and clearly some clarification was required. But that's now been
given," he said. He said cases of those who were possibly fined in error
were being reviewed by the Public Health Agency of Canada, which oversees
quarantine violations. Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) said there can be a
transition period that "may lead to some inconsistencies'' when
operational guidelines are changed. "We are working to ensure clear
application of this at the border," CBSA said in a statement to CBC News.
Jones said it's surprising that
border agents were unaware of the exemption, especially because it was widely
covered by news organizations. In the meantime, she's gone to the courthouse in
Surrey to file a ticket dispute, and is hoping to hear the fine has been
rescinded. "No one has phoned me officially and told me my ticket has been
bounced," she said. "I guess the proof will come when I go to pay my
insurance in January." CBSA is reminding people that the B.C. exemption
does not apply to discretionary, non-essential travel. "This means that travellers who enter the
U.S. for the purposes of shopping for non-essential goods, or to eat at
restaurants, visit friends or attend events, would be deemed discretionary and
would not be exempt from the requirements for a molecular [PCR] test," the
agency said.
^ I have dealt with Border Guards
around the world that don’t always know the laws (even ones that are decades
old.) Of course they have authority over us and even when they are completely
in the wrong they can punish you and make you feel like a criminal and there is
little to nothing you can do about it – and fixing things after the fact does
little to fix the abuse you encountered. If Travelers are expected to know
every single rule - even the new ones –
then the Border Guards definitely need to be expected to know every single rule
– even the new ones. The Border Guards in this case should be forced to make an
official apology to every single person they mistreated. They were completely
in the wrong and did not do their jobs in a good and professional manner and
need to be reminded that they are not always in the right and need to do a lot
better. Of course the Canadian Border Guards won’t do that – because they can
never officially admit they make mistakes, but they should. ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/fined-border-cross-1.6259536
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