Thursday, June 11, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. premier questions COVID-19 travel rules

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 Oct, 2021 03:51 PM
  • B.C. premier questions COVID-19 travel rules

VICTORIA - British Columbia's premier says the federal government's COVID-19 testing rules on travelling to and from the United States make little sense to him.

John Horgan says he finds Ottawa's testing requirement counter to the whole point of staying safe, saying he could get a test in Vancouver, travel to the United States and come back within 72 hours using the same test.

He also expressed concern about people taking advantage of the system, wondering whether people might fake symptoms to get a free test in order to use the results to travel.

Horgan says his concerns about the testing were partly behind his decision not to accept an invitation to visit from Washington state Gov. Jay Inslee.

The provincial government announced Thursday that it was extending several COVID-19-related orders meant to limit the spread of infection as the fourth wave sweeps over the province.

The COVID-19 Related Measures Act was to be repealed on Dec. 31, but the government says in a statement that changes will be introduced to the bill in the legislature.

The act allows key legal documents to be witnessed remotely and lets the courts say which proceedings can be conducted remotely.

It also supports orders of the provincial health officer to impose conditions on the number of long-term care facilities where staff are allowed to work in an effort to stop the transmission of COVID-19.

The law gives civil liability protection to people or companies providing essential services by operating a business that benefits the community, so long as they follow public health orders.

The government says it's issuing the notice of the changes to allow for those organizations or businesses that use the legislation to plan beyond the original deadline.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Restrictions tighten amid third wave of COVID-19

Restrictions tighten amid third wave of COVID-19
The move comes a day after Premier Jason Kenney said widespread rule-breaking forced his government to shut down indoor dinning, curb indoor fitness and reduce retail capacity.

Restrictions tighten amid third wave of COVID-19

Canadians, Americans divided on vaccine 'passport'

Canadians, Americans divided on vaccine 'passport'
It found 52 per cent of Canadian respondents supported showing proof of vaccination, compared with 43 per cent of Americans.

Canadians, Americans divided on vaccine 'passport'

Highway 1 head-on crash in B.C. kills two

Highway 1 head-on crash in B.C. kills two
RCMP say a 73-year-old man driving a pickup crossed the centre line and hit a sedan coming in the opposite direction.

Highway 1 head-on crash in B.C. kills two

Skills program aims to shock-proof workforce

Skills program aims to shock-proof workforce
The Future Skills Centre is also slated to launch an online career search tool on Thursday alongside the Conference Board of Canada.

Skills program aims to shock-proof workforce

Basic income could cut poverty rates in half: PBO

Basic income could cut poverty rates in half: PBO
Although nationally the drop in poverty rates under such a measure would be about 49 per cent, the reductions would vary across provinces.

Basic income could cut poverty rates in half: PBO

Climate change group pushes NDP-Greens alliance

Climate change group pushes NDP-Greens alliance
Organizers with 350 Canadasay each party on its own doesn't have the seats needed to elect enough MPs to push the country toward a stronger climate agenda.

Climate change group pushes NDP-Greens alliance