Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
National

Plans for 'Atlantic bubble' on July 3 as cases of COVID-19 stabilize

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Jun, 2020 05:55 PM
  • Plans for 'Atlantic bubble' on July 3 as cases of COVID-19 stabilize

The four Atlantic provinces have announced plans to ease interprovincial travel restrictions, creating a so-called "bubble" as the region has reported relatively few new COVID-19 infections in recent weeks.

As of July 3, residents of Atlantic Canada will be allowed to travel within the region without having to self-isolate for two weeks when arriving in another province.

Visitors from provinces and territories outside the region will still be required to self-isolate for 14 days and adhere to local entry requirements. However, once the self-isolation period has passed, those visitors will also be allowed to travel within the Atlantic region.

Each of the four provinces will choose its own process for tracking and monitoring travellers.

The relaxed rules come as Nova Scotia — the most populous province in the region — announced Tuesday it had not recorded a new case of the viral infection in the past two weeks, and it had no active cases. The province had 1,061 total confirmed cases, including 63 deaths — 53 of them at a single long-term care facility in Halifax.

In Newfoundland and Labrador, where there were 261 confirmed cases and three deaths, the most recent case of COVID-19 was recorded on May 28. Like Nova Scotia, the province has no active cases.

New Brunswick reported one new case in the Moncton region on Tuesday, but that person was in self-isolation before the diagnosis and has had no close contacts. The province has 20 active cases. Of the 165 people with confirmed infections, two have died and 143 have recovered.

Prince Edward Island had just 27 cases of COVID-19 and all have recovered. The Island last reported a case on April 28.

MORE National ARTICLES

CRA Sets Up Anonymous Snitch Line To Catch CERB & Tax Fraud

CRA Sets Up Anonymous Snitch Line To Catch CERB & Tax Fraud
Beware not to fraud the govt if you have applied for CERB, wage subsidy or other funding programs during the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic as the Canada Revenue Agency has you under its watch and you will have to repay the money.

CRA Sets Up Anonymous Snitch Line To Catch CERB & Tax Fraud

Telus dumps Huawei chooses Ericsson and Nokia to build 5G network

Telus dumps Huawei  chooses Ericsson and Nokia to build 5G network
Two major Canadian telecommunication giants said they will build out their next-generation 5G wireless networks with equipment from European providers, dumping China’s Huawei Technologies Co.

Telus dumps Huawei chooses Ericsson and Nokia to build 5G network

Climate change threatens glass sponge reefs unique to Pacific Northwest: study

Climate change threatens glass sponge reefs unique to Pacific Northwest: study
Warming ocean temperatures and acidification caused by climate change are threatening the survival of glass sponge reefs unique to the waters of the Pacific Northwest, a new study from researchers at the University of British Columbia has found.

Climate change threatens glass sponge reefs unique to Pacific Northwest: study

One in three students back in classrooms in British Columbia: minister

One in three students back in classrooms in British Columbia: minister
Education Minister Rob Fleming says about one third of students returned to classrooms in British Columbia yesterday and he expects those numbers to rise.

One in three students back in classrooms in British Columbia: minister

B.C. immigration program well managed, but fraud, corruption are risks: auditor

B.C. immigration program well managed, but fraud, corruption are risks: auditor
An audit says an immigration program that brings workers to British Columbia fills labour gaps but needs to improve safeguards for fraud and corruption.

B.C. immigration program well managed, but fraud, corruption are risks: auditor

Israeli, Chinese policies 'concern' Canada, undermine freedom, says Trudeau

Israeli, Chinese policies 'concern' Canada, undermine freedom, says Trudeau
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau waded into the foreign policies of Israel and China on Tuesday, expressing concerns over separate but controversial positions that he says undermine peace in both places.

Israeli, Chinese policies 'concern' Canada, undermine freedom, says Trudeau