Saturday, June 27, 2026
ADVT 
National

Atlantic Canada against lifting quarantine rules: survey

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Aug, 2020 08:07 PM
  • Atlantic Canada against lifting quarantine rules: survey

A new survey indicates Atlantic Canada is largely opposed to lifting travel restrictions for Canadians who live outside the region.

More than 3,300 Atlantic Canadians participated in the Narrative Research online survey between Aug. 5-9. The results, published Thursday, indicate more than three-quarters of respondents were opposed to lifting 14-day quarantine requirements for visitors from the rest of Canada within the next month.

COVID-19 numbers have remained low across the four provinces this summer. In July, Atlantic Canada created the so-called travel "bubble," which waived the 14-day self-isolation rules for residents of the region who enter into Newfoundland and Labrador, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island.

Margaret Brigley, CEO of Halifax-based Narrative Research, said measures to suppress the novel coronavirus have paid off and put the region in an "enviable position," but the survey results, she added, show Atlantic Canadians are uncomfortable with the perceived risks of accepting more visitors.

"Findings suggest that residents are not confident that safety measures in place would protect us from a viral spread if borders were to open," Brigley said Thursday in a statement.

Opposition to opening up the travel bubble was highest in Nova Scotia, at 80 per cent.

Eighty-eight per cent of Atlantic Canadians completely oppose opening Canadian borders to the United States within the next month. Seventy-nine per cent of respondents said they had not left their home provinces since Atlantic Canada created the travel bubble.

Prince Edward Islanders were most likely to have travelled within the Atlantic region, at 38 per cent, while Newfoundlanders and Labradorians were the least likely, at seven per cent.

People who had travelled within the Atlantic bubble were more likely under the age of 55 and higher income earners. Of those who travelled, 87 per cent said they were satisfied with the arrangements by the region's provincial governments.

The survey does not have a margin of error because it used a non-probabilistic sample of respondents.

MORE National ARTICLES

Procurement Minister Defends Rule Change For F-35 As Necessary For Competition

Procurement Minister Defends Rule Change For F-35 As Necessary For Competition
Federal procurement minister Carla Qualtrough is defending the government's plan to loosen procurement rules for the F-35 in the face of questions and concerns from companies that make competing fighter jets.

Procurement Minister Defends Rule Change For F-35 As Necessary For Competition

Vancouver Senior Has Broken Hip, Three Men Flee After Trying To Steal Her Purse

Vancouver police hope someone can identify the men who knocked an 85-year-old woman to the ground, breaking her hip, as they tried to steal her purse.

Vancouver Senior Has Broken Hip, Three Men Flee After Trying To Steal Her Purse

Walk For A Drug And Gang Free Surrey Was A Tremendous Success

Progressive Intercultural Community Services (PICS) Society hosted its very first Walk for A Drug and Gang Free Surrey from Surrey City Hall to Holland Park on May 18, 2019 from 9 am to 12 pm.    

Walk For A Drug And Gang Free Surrey Was A Tremendous Success

Education Minister Calls Out Montreal School For Putting Autistic Kids In Closet

Education Minister Calls Out Montreal School For Putting Autistic Kids In Closet
Quebec's education minister called out a Montreal school Tuesday for its reported practice of locking panicking autistic children into a small and unsafe closet to calm them down.

Education Minister Calls Out Montreal School For Putting Autistic Kids In Closet

Woman Charged After Allegedly Throwing Bong Water On Ex-Girlfriend

Woman Charged After Allegedly Throwing Bong Water On Ex-Girlfriend
KINGSTON, Ont. — An Ontario woman who allegedly threw bong water on her ex-girlfriend during an argument has been charged with assault.

Woman Charged After Allegedly Throwing Bong Water On Ex-Girlfriend

'Snowden Refugee' Living In Montreal Calls On Canada To Accept Others

A refugee who helped shelter whistleblower Edward Snowden in Hong Kong is calling on immigration officials to allow other members of her daughter's family to join her in Canada.

'Snowden Refugee' Living In Montreal Calls On Canada To Accept Others