Monday, December 29, 2025
ADVT 
National

Canada and U.S. extend border closure to Nov. 21

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Oct, 2020 05:34 PM
  • Canada and U.S. extend border closure to Nov. 21

Incidental visits like vacations, day trips and cross-border shopping excursions have been forbidden since March in an effort to limit the spread of COVID-19.

The restrictions do not apply to those who must cross to ensure the continued flow of goods and essential services, including truckers and health workers who live in one country but work in the other. Canada has also added certain exemptions to reunite extended family members.

But despite alarming signs of the pandemic making a comeback on the cusp of colder weather and flu season, President Donald Trump and his officials have persisted in playing down the dangers, and speak straight-faced about lifting the ban sooner rather than later.

In an interview last week with a Detroit radio station, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo echoed Trump's claim last month that Canada is keen to resume travel — a sentiment that's at odds with both public opinion and the official position north of the border.

"We’ve got to get America back going again. And the Canadians want this, too," Pompeo told WJR Detroit.

"We’re working to create a set of international protocols so that we can do the right thing, make sure people stay safe and healthy, but make sure also that people can do the things they need to do to take care of their families and their businesses."

An online poll released last week by Leger and the Association for Canadian Studies suggested two out of three Canadians would not be comfortable travelling to the U.S. even once the restrictions are lifted.

The strongest reservations were expressed in Ontario and B.C., where 77 per cent said they would not travel. Quebec and Atlantic Canada were somewhat less concerned at 63 per cent and 65 per cent, respectively.

Online surveys cannot be assigned a margin of error because they do not generate a random sample of the population.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has said the travel ban won't be eased until there's clear evidence the pandemic is slowing in the United States.

                 WATCH: Canda Border clsoure extended til Nov 21st

"We keep extending the border closures because the United States is not in a place where we would feel comfortable reopening those borders," Trudeau told the Global News podcast The Start last week.

"We see the cases in the United States and elsewhere around the world, and we need to continue to keep these border controls in place."

Trump, however, seems to see it differently, raising eyebrows last month when he suggested the border would reopen by the end of the year.

"Canada would like it open, and, you know, we want to get back to normal business," he said.

"We have a great trade deal right now, and so we’re going to be opening the borders pretty soon."

MORE National ARTICLES

Calls grow for media to address own failures with systemic racism

Calls grow for media to address own failures with systemic racism
Journalists have not had to go far to uncover searing stories of racism in Canada — they're finding them in their own newsrooms, among their co-workers and involving their bosses.

Calls grow for media to address own failures with systemic racism

Border crossers cost $81M, not $200M, AG says

Border crossers cost $81M, not $200M, AG says
Ontario significantly overstated the costs of providing services to asylum seekers coming into Canada from the United States, the province's auditor general said Wednesday.

Border crossers cost $81M, not $200M, AG says

Feds post non-existent volunteer positions

Feds post non-existent volunteer positions
The federal website advertising volunteer positions for students hoping to earn money for their educations through a $900-million government aid program contains hundreds — if not thousands — of positions that might not actually exist.

Feds post non-existent volunteer positions

Pandemic lays bare economic disparities

Pandemic lays bare economic disparities
Fixing the social and economic gaps that left women, young people and racialized Canadians to suffer the biggest economic blows from the COVID-19 pandemic is a top priority in the recovery effort, Finance Minister Bill Morneau says.

Pandemic lays bare economic disparities

Federal deficit $343B amid uncertain outlook

Federal deficit $343B amid uncertain outlook
Nearly two million Canadians could be without jobs this year under forecasts released by the federal government in its long-awaited "fiscal snapshot."

Federal deficit $343B amid uncertain outlook

Border agency behind on removals: auditor

Border agency behind on removals: auditor
Canada's border agency has failed to promptly remove most of the people under orders to leave the country, the federal auditor general says.

Border agency behind on removals: auditor