Sunday, June 28, 2026
ADVT 
National

Stranded Canadians Struggle To Return Home—And Get Refunds For Cancelled Flights

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Mar, 2020 10:50 PM

    Canadians abroad are raising concerns about compensation as they try to find a way back home, with some stranded as borders close and airlines cut flights due to the novel coronavirus pandemic.

     

    Many overseas travellers have seen their routes suspended and booked return trips with a different airline after Global Affairs Canada on Saturday urged Canadians to hurry back to home soil.

     

    Jacqui Birchall, a retired teacher who spends half the year in Mexico, said she is hoping for a full refund from WestJet after it cancelled her flight from Puerto Vallarta to Vancouver as part of its 50 per cent capacity reduction. The airline has not offered to repay the ticket cost, she said.

     

    "WestJet is refusing a refund and they’re giving WestJet dollar credit ... so you have to rebook with WestJet,” she said.

     

    Birchall opted to book a flight home with Air Canada next week instead, more than a month earlier than planned.

     

    "It’s spring break down here. But I took a walk along the beach and it was empty. All the stores were empty. The farmer’s market was cancelled,” she said. "Everyone in Mexico hugs and kisses. But now it’s all elbow bumping."

     

    On Friday, the Canadian Transportation Agency said that flight disruptions to destinations covered by a government advisory against travel due to COVID-19 qualify as "outside of the air carrier's control," and thus require no compensation for inconvenience.

     

    The agency did not state whether airlines must offer a basic refund on a cancelled flight.

     

    The European Commission has rejected airlines' request to offer rebooking or vouchers in place of refunds.

     

    "Carriers have to offer reimbursement (refund of tickets) or re-routing to passengers whose service has been cancelled," the European Union executive arm said Wednesday.

     

    All Canadian airlines now offer no-fee rebooking as they ground planes amid the novel coronavirus outbreak, but only Sunwing has a refund policy in place for the cancelled routes.

     

    Carriers could lose hundreds of millions of dollars if full refunds were issued across thousands of flights, but Sunwing spokeswoman Rachel Goldrick says it makes sense to pay back customers who are out of pocket.

     

    "We’re suspending the flights, so we think it's only right that we should be refunding," she said.

     

    Canadians who need help returning home will be able to apply for an emergency loan of up to $5,000 from the federal government.

     

    That comes as cold comfort for Eve Blake-Davies, 68, who is stranded in Quito, Ecuador, after Air Canada turned her and eight others away at the gate on Monday despite her having boarding pass, she said.

     

    "I cried. Other people cried. Air Canada just said, 'You can’t get on,'" said Blake-Davies, who lives in Brampton and was volunteering at an Ecuadorian animal shelter. "We were devastated."

     

    Ecuador has shut down its borders, including to citizens, for the next 21 days as a strict quarantine goes into effect.

     

    "They say people over 50 years old cannot go out of their homes," Blake-Davies said. "We can’t go out. So we’re just here twiddling our thumbs."

     

    Canadian and global airlines have begun massive scalebacks to adapt to the nosedive in demand amid border shutdowns, including in Canada where the border will be closed to non-essential traffic in both directions.

     

    Air Canada is cutting its overall seat capacity in half, and by 75 per cent in the Pacific market. WestJet Airlines Ltd. is cancelling all transatlantic and U.S. routes for 30 days starting this Sunday, chopping 155 flights on Wednesday alone. Sunwing Airlines Inc. has scrubbed all southbound flights from its schedule until April 9.

     

    This week Quebecers Guillaume Rioux and Valerie Simard found themselves stranded in Peru with their one-year-old son after an attempted visit to Machu Picchu. The country’s president announced a travel ban Sunday night, and a strict self-isolation policy in place prompted the closure of the Canadian embassy.

     

    "We’re allowed to go out and get food, but we see the police in the streets and they’re asking for our passports and they tell us to go back inside," Rioux said, a landscape contractor.

     

    "Right now it’s the busy season for everybody that wants submissions for their work. It's the moment that I book my whole season. So when I get back I’ll have to be fast on the response," he said.

     

    "I'm a bit disappointed about the government not acting fast enough," he said.

     

    Global Affairs Canada said in a statement Tuesday that "Canada has no current plans to repatriate a significant group of people from other countries."

     

    About three million Canadians live and work abroad at any given time, Trudeau said Tuesday.

     

    "We are looking at every possible way of bringing Canadians home," Trudeau said. "It’s realistic to know some of them won’t be coming home in the coming weeks."

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    SEE PICS: Ontario’s First Komagata Maru Memorial Park Opens In Brampton

    The SS Komagata Maru ship departed from Hong Kong in May of 1914, transporting immigrants, largely from the Punjab region of India, to Canada.

    SEE PICS: Ontario’s First Komagata Maru Memorial Park Opens In Brampton

    Lawyers Urge Canada To Stop Chinese Exec's Extradition To U.S. On Fraud Charges

    VANCOUVER — Defence lawyers for a senior Huawei executive have asked Canada's foreign affairs minister to stop the extradition process against their client, saying the request made by the United States was for political purposes, not legitimate law enforcement reasons.

    Lawyers Urge Canada To Stop Chinese Exec's Extradition To U.S. On Fraud Charges

    Top B.C. Court Upholds Ruling That Struck Down Canada's Solitary Confinement Law

    Top B.C. Court Upholds Ruling That Struck Down Canada's Solitary Confinement Law
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia's Court of Appeal has upheld a lower court ruling that struck down Canada's solitary confinement law.

    Top B.C. Court Upholds Ruling That Struck Down Canada's Solitary Confinement Law

    Two Injured When Out-of-control Car Crashes Into Quebec Ferry At Dock: Police

    Two people were seriously injured Monday when their car crashed into a Quebec ferry.    

    Two Injured When Out-of-control Car Crashes Into Quebec Ferry At Dock: Police

    Ayanle Hassan Ali Who Attacked Military Personnel Should Be Deemed Terrorist: Crown

    Ayanle Hassan Ali was charged with attempted murder, assault causing bodily harm and assault with a weapon, as well as carrying a weapon, all for the benefit of a terrorist group in connection with the March 2016 knife attack.

    Ayanle Hassan Ali Who Attacked Military Personnel Should Be Deemed Terrorist: Crown

    Aviation Experts Question Security, Passenger Safety After Woman Left On Plane

    Aviation Experts Question Security, Passenger Safety After Woman Left On Plane
    Aviation experts are raising security and passenger safety concerns after a woman was left sleeping on a parked Air Canada aircraft with the lights turned off and crew gone.

    Aviation Experts Question Security, Passenger Safety After Woman Left On Plane