From CBC:
“Ottawa announces suspension
of vaccine mandates for domestic travel, federal employees”
The federal government has
announced a suspension of vaccine mandates for federal employees and for
passengers wishing to board a plane or train in Canada. Federal employees and
transportation workers in federally regulated sectors will no longer have to be
fully vaccinated as a condition of their work. Those on unpaid administrative
leave because of their vaccination status will be invited to return to work.
Starting June 20, vaccines will
no longer be required for travellers in Canada. Canadian citizens entering the
country from abroad will still be required to meet entry requirements and masks
will remain mandatory for those boarding planes or trains in Canada. Visitors
to Canada will have to be fully vaccinated to enter the country, or meet the
requirements of an exemption. Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs Dominic
LeBlanc told reporters that while some mandates are being suspended, the
federal government will bring them back if the COVID-19 situation changes for
the worse. "Today's announcement is
possible because Canadians have stepped up to protect each other," LeBlanc
said. "We are now able to adjust our policy because we have followed
consistently the best advice from public health authorities." LeBlanc said
that the federal government does not regret its cautious approach to lifting
mandates, adding that Ottawa's policies saved lives.
Vaccine mandates for cruise ship
passengers and crews will remain in place, as will adherence to strict public
health measures. The vaccine mandates
for travel have been in effect since Oct. 30, 2021. As the mandates were phased
in, travellers had a one-month grace period during which they could instead
provide proof of a negative COVID-19 test. Unvaccinated Canadians have always
been allowed to return to Canada. But the federal government's website says
unvaccinated Canadians have to meet all "pre-entry, arrival, Day-8
testing, ArriveCAN and quarantine requirements" or face a fine up to
$5,000 or criminal prosecution.
Airport congestion The
government has been under pressure from opposition parties and industry
organizations to relax some public health measures in response to delays and
long lineups at airports. Transport Minister Omar Alghabra said the
changes to vaccine mandates are not a response to congestion at Canada's
airports but are motivated by health advice and the effect mandates and
vaccination policies have had on previous COVID-19 waves. "International
airports are facing similar challenges," he said. "Heathrow's
airport, Amsterdam's airport, Dublin's airports, U.S. airports — this is a
phenomenon that we are seeing because of a surge in demand and the labour is
trying to catch up to that surge. "We have a responsibility to act.
We are working with airlines, we are working with airports and we are doing
everything we can to ease those bottlenecks."
Suspending random testing Last
week, the federal government announced that it was suspending random COVID-19
testing at airports. At that time, Alghabra said Ottawa was taking other
measures to address airport congestion, such as hiring more security screening
personnel and adding more customs kiosks at Toronto's Pearson International
Airport. Government officials — including Alghabra, Health Minister
Jean-Yves Duclos and Chief Public Health Officer Theresa Tam — have pointed to
mandates as an effective way of getting more Canadians vaccinated. But
experts have questioned the effectiveness of vaccine mandates for travel since
the emergence of the more infectious Omicron variant. Tam has said that
effective protection against the variant requires a third booster dose.
'Right time' to end vaccine
travel mandates, says specialist It's reasonable for Ottawa to drop the
COVID-19 vaccine mandates for travel, says infectious diseases specialist, Dr.
Isaac Bogoch, noting two doses doesn't prevent Omicron transmission. So far,
the government's definition of "fully vaccinated" remains two doses
of an approved COVID-19 vaccine or one dose of the Johnson & Johnson
vaccine. Infectious diseases specialist Dr. Isaac Bogoch said that while
two doses of a COVID-19 vaccine protects against severe illness or death, it's
time to end the travel mandates. "The purpose was to really prevent
transmission of COVID-19 in transportation," he said. "Two doses
doesn't really provide much in the way of protection against getting the
infection and onward transmission of the infection for those who are
infected."
Unions welcome policy change Representatives
of the Public Service Alliance of Canada (PSAC) and the Professional Institute
of the Public Service of Canada (PIPSC) — which together represent more than
250,000 federal public servants — welcomed the move but said they were
frustrated by having to learn of the change through the media. "Unfortunately, the federal
government did not consult with PSAC before making its decision to lift its
vaccination policy. Unions should always be consulted on policies that have a
major impact on the terms and conditions of employment of our members to
protect their health and safety and their rights in the workplace," PSAC
said in a media statement. PIPSC issued a statement saying it welcomed
the announcement but — like PSAC — it's concerned about union members who
remain on leave without pay and is awaiting details on how they'll be phased
back into the workplace.
^ It’s nice to see the Canadian
Federal Government finally do this. ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/government-end-vax-mandates-1.6487585
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