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Eased requirements in effect as travel industry demands end to COVID-19 testing

Industry hosts news conference today to demand Ottawa remove all COVID-19 border restrictions
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People wait at OR Tambo’s airport in Johannesburg, South Africa’, Friday Nov. 26, 2021. (AP Photo/Jerome Delay)

Christopher Reynolds

Medical professionals and industry groups are calling on Ottawa to end all COVID-19 border testing requirements as the travel sector struggles to recover two years into the pandemic.

Rule changes, including removal of the requirement that fully vaccinated Canadian travellers take a pre-departure COVID-19 molecular test, took effect Monday.

Rapid antigen tests administered by a health professional remain mandatory for foreign visitors, and for Canadians who want to avoid quarantining at home for 10 days upon return.

At a Monday news conference at the Calgary airport hosted by the Canadian Travel and Tourism Roundtable, WestJet communications vice-president Richard Bartrem said the carrier’s flight volume remains at half of its 2019 level of roughly 700 trips per day.

“Fully vaccinated Canadians and inbound visitors should no longer be subject to out-of-pocket testing expenses and outdated measures when returning home,” he said.

Dr. Zain Chagla, an infectious diseases physician at St. Joseph’s hospital in Hamilton and an associate professor at McMaster University, said that “we really aren’t achieving much with what we’re throwing at the border other than increasing the inconvenience of the traveller.”

“Every variant of concern has made it into Canada and the likelihood of someone acquiring COVID in Canada is not from travel but it is from our day-to-day lives,” he said.

Chagla noted that settings ranging from sports arenas to bars and nightclubs do not require a COVID-19 test.

He also pointed to the United Kingdom and other European countries that have dropped border testing requirements while continuing to surveil for variants in the community via local testing and genome sequencing.

The cost and lower accuracy of rapid tests, which are nonetheless potentially cheaper and easier to access than molecular tests, are another concern.

“We know rapid tests in the era of Omicron are lower sensitivity … Random individuals are less likely to be positive unless they have symptoms that have been ongoing for some time,” Chagla said.

Rapid tests must be taken the day before a scheduled flight or arrival at the land border.

“The likelihood of picking up a positive case is like finding a needle in a haystack. But the costs are not negligible, right? People are still paying $20 to $50 for these tests, so for a family of four it’s an extra few hundred dollars into testing,” he added.

The federal government announced earlier this month that as of Feb. 28 double-vaccinated air and land travellers no longer need to present a negative molecular test result, such as a PCR test, before departure for Canada.

Unvaccinated children under 12 also no longer need to self-isolate upon return to the country. And Ottawa has lifted its blanket advisory against trips abroad, removing a travel insurance obstacle as well as a mental hurdle for many would-be vacationers on the verge of spring break.

Random PCR screening of travellers after they arrive at airports or land crossings continues, with test recipients required to self-quarantine until the results come in.

Wendy Paradis, president of the Association of Canadian Travel Agencies, said in an interview rapid tests remain an “unnecessary barrier” to family and business travel.

Occupancy rates at the Radisson-owned Country Inn and Suites at the Calgary airport remain below 50 per cent of 2019 figures, general manager Leanne Shaw told reporters.

Richard Bartrem of WestJet said talks with Transport Canada have been “positive,” but that he hopes pre-departure rapid testing and on-arrival random tests will end within 30 days.