Sunday, April 5, 2026
ADVT 
International

How New Security Rules Impact Canadians Flying Into U.S.

Darpan News Desk, 26 Oct, 2017 12:17 PM
    TORONTO — Canadian travellers flying into the United States are subject to new security protocols implemented Thursday but airlines aren't saying much about what the screening procedures entail.
     
    The U.S. Transportation Security Administration announced in June that there would be heightened security for international flights to the U.S. starting this fall.
     
    The TSA said it would include increased screening of passengers and their cellphones and other electronic devices, as well as more security around planes and in passenger areas.
     
    Air Canada spokesman Peter Fitzpatrick says the new measures are in effect for the airline but he wouldn't say what they consist of because security is handled by U.S. Customs and Border Protection.
     
    Fitzpatrick says all of the airline's flights from Canada to the U.S. have passengers go through preclearance security, so they would encounter the new measures before taking off, not after landing in an American airport.
     
    A representative from WestJet says the airline is working with the TSA to implement the new protocols and does not expect any immediate impact on Canadian passengers travelling to the U.S.
     
    WestJet passengers go through preclearance security at some but not all of the Canadian airports the airline operates from.
     
    Passengers on Porter Airlines flights will have to go through the new security checks once they land in the U.S., as Billy Bishop Toronto City Airport does not offer preclearance. The airline says passengers can expect the same check-in experience as before.
     
     
    International airlines have been offering differing accounts of how they will implement the new security rules.
     
    Long-haul carrier Emirates said it would conduct "passenger pre-screening interviews" for those travelling on U.S.-bound flights, along with other checks on electronics.
     
    Air France said it would begin the new security interviews on Thursday at Paris Orly Airport and a week later at Charles de Gaulle Airport in Paris. The airline said the extra screening would take the form of a questionnaire handed to all passengers.
     
    Other airlines, including Korean Air Lines Co., Asiana Airlines Inc., and Royal Jordanian, said they received permission to delay implementing the new protocols until next year.
     
     
    TSA spokeswoman Lisa Farbstein wouldn't comment on the specifics of any of the new measures, but says they apply to all passengers flying into the U.S., including American citizens, and that approximately 2,100 flights a day will be impacted.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    ISIS Continues To Recruit From Af-Pak Border Region: UN Report

    The report noted that a UN Member State reported that ISIS had around 2,000 to 3,500 fighters overall in Afghanistan but that number had not fallen significantly despite heavy losses sustained in 2016.

    ISIS Continues To Recruit From Af-Pak Border Region: UN Report

    US Firms Going Abroad Can't Say 'Bye-Bye And Fire Everybody', Warns Donald Trump

    In his weekly address to the nation, Donald Trump also said that he is working on a major tax reform which would massively reduce taxes of American workers and businesses.

    US Firms Going Abroad Can't Say 'Bye-Bye And Fire Everybody', Warns Donald Trump

    Woman Says 'Justice' In Sexual Assault Case Came At Personal Cost

    Woman Says 'Justice' In Sexual Assault Case Came At Personal Cost
    While the 22-year-old Nova Scotia woman says ultimately "justice was served" by the courts, she maintains it came at such a personal cost she would have been better off had she never gone to the authorities.

    Woman Says 'Justice' In Sexual Assault Case Came At Personal Cost

    Quebec Student Athlete Says He Was Denied Entry To The United States

    Quebec Student Athlete Says He Was Denied Entry To The United States
    Yassine Aber, 19, was denied entry to the United States on Thursday. The Canadian-born athlete faced questions about his place of birth, his parents and countries he's visited recently. 

    Quebec Student Athlete Says He Was Denied Entry To The United States

    India Will Be World's Fastest Growing Economy In 5 Years: Top US Think Tank

    India Will Be World's Fastest Growing Economy In 5 Years: Top US Think Tank
    Pakistan, unable to match India's economic prowess, will seek other methods to maintain even a semblance of balance

    India Will Be World's Fastest Growing Economy In 5 Years: Top US Think Tank

    One Dead, Five In Hospital After Fire At Toronto Community Housing Building

    One Dead, Five In Hospital After Fire At Toronto Community Housing Building
    Toronto's fire chief says one person died and five others were taken to hospital after a fire at a downtown community housing building on Thursday evening.

    One Dead, Five In Hospital After Fire At Toronto Community Housing Building