Thursday, April 9, 2026
ADVT 
National

Most arrivals in Canada deemed 'essential'

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Oct, 2020 07:12 PM
  • Most arrivals in Canada deemed 'essential'

More than 4.6 million people have arrived in Canada since the border closed last March but less than one-quarter of them were ordered to quarantine — the rest were deemed "essential" and exempted from the requirement.

The Canada Border Services Agency provides data each week on the number of people arriving in Canada by land or air, saying "most" people entering the country must quarantine for two weeks.

Essential travellers include truck drivers, airline crew members, health-care workers, members of the military, people living in border communities who need to perform everyday functions in Canada, and people Ottawa deems essential to managing the pandemic.

The Public Health Agency of Canada provided data to The Canadian Press that shows 4.6 million people arrived in Canada since March 21, when the border was to be closed to all non-essential travel.

Of those, 3.5 million were considered essential while 1.1 million people were non-essential travellers and ordered to quarantine.

Health Canada data on 80 per cent of the confirmed cases to date shows about 4.4 per cent of the total number of positive cases of COVID-19 in this country involved recent travellers or people who came into contact with them.

MORE National ARTICLES

Pooled testing could help with back to school

Pooled testing could help with back to school
Some epidemiologists believe testing a group of COVID nasal-swab samples together — a strategy known as pooled testing or batch testing — might be a more efficient method for dealing with a large number of tests that could potentially be coming in.

Pooled testing could help with back to school

Compromise keeps 'Black Lives Matter' paint off Boardwalk

Compromise keeps 'Black Lives Matter' paint off Boardwalk
While about a dozen demonstrators rallied on the Boardwalk, about a half-mile away, volunteers for the city painted the words “Black Lives Matter” in bold yellow on Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard.

Compromise keeps 'Black Lives Matter' paint off Boardwalk

N.S. assisted death case: wife loses in court

N.S. assisted death case: wife loses in court
The woman was seeking a stay of a lower court ruling that rejected her request for an injunction, having concluded the 83-year-old man with end-stage chronic obstructive pulmonary disease — identified as Mr. X — was entitled to the procedure because he met the criteria under federal law.

N.S. assisted death case: wife loses in court

RCMP secrets case inches along

RCMP secrets case inches along
Next week will mark one year since Ortis, director of an RCMP intelligence centre, was arrested, making international headlines.

RCMP secrets case inches along

B.C. announces new hospital for Dawson Creek

B.C. announces new hospital for Dawson Creek
Health Minister Adrian Dix says the new hospital is something he and local officials have aspired to have built for a long time.

B.C. announces new hospital for Dawson Creek

COVID forces Yukon Quest dog-sled race to cancel

COVID forces Yukon Quest dog-sled race to cancel
The race normally runs between Fairbanks, Alaska, and Whitehorse in February, travelling through 10 different communities.

COVID forces Yukon Quest dog-sled race to cancel