DEVELOPING Latest updates on the major wildfires burning in Canada
The 2024 wildfire season has begun, and it's shaping up to follow last year's unprecedented destruction in kind, with thousands of square kilometres already consumed.
Business leaders are calling on Ottawa to immediately lay out a comprehensive plan to reopen the economy and international borders along with a vaccine certification process as they struggle to prepare for a summer season hanging in flux.
At a news conference Monday, a Canadian travel and tourism roundtable said the federal government must heed advice from its expert advisory panel last month and allow fully vaccinated foreigners into the country.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Sunday he spoke with U.S. President Joe Biden at the G7 summit about easing border restrictions, but gave no hints that a timeline or other specifics have been settled on.
Perrin Beatty, chief executive of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce, called Canada a G7 "outlier" in failing to provide a fully fledged reopening plan that includes vaccination rates and other criteria.
"We are well behind other countries. The great irony here is that Canada is a world leader when it comes to first shots, first vaccinations. And yet we're a world laggard when it comes to having a plan for reopening," Beatty told reporters.
He cited a "systematic plan" to unlock borders in the European Union and projections for a major travel rebound within the United States after the Transportation Safety Authority reported record air passenger numbers over Memorial Day weekend late last month.
"At some point government has to decide whether being vaccinated is meaningful," Beatty said. "We need a plan. We need it now. And everybody needs to know what it is."
British Columbia Premier John Horgan said Trudeau has called premiers for a meeting Thursday to discuss reopening borders by land, air and sea.
The tourism and travel sectors have lost billions over the past 15 months amid ongoing travel advisories and border closures due to the pandemic.
The U.S.-Canada border closure, in place since March 20 and renewed monthly, is currently set to expire next Monday with no word yet on an extension, leaving the travel and tourism sectors uncertain how to prepare for the subsequent weeks.
Beth Potter, CEO of the Tourism Industry Association of Canada, called for federal leadership on interprovincial travel as stakeholders stressed clarity and coherence.
"In the absence of a nationwide plan we are seeing a patchwork of policies roll out initially that creates confusion for travellers," she said. Potter called the result of 13 different plans -- one for each province and territory -- "unnecessary and cumbersome."
"Tonight we're going to see the (Montreal) Canadiens play in Vegas in front of 30,000 fans," she said. "If there can be a plan for our NHL teams, why can't there be a plan for the rest of Canadians?"
The government took a cautious first step last week when it announced that Canadian citizens and permanent residents who have received two vaccine doses and who test negative for COVID-19 will likely be exempt from two weeks' self-isolation, including hotel quarantines, starting early next month.
Several key details remain unknown, including precise dates and whether children under 12 years old travelling with their parents will also be exempt, given their ineligibility for vaccination.
The government said last month it is working with G7 countries and the European Union to integrate vaccine certification into international travel in the months ahead.
Canada could lose up to three-quarters of its small and medium-sized tourism businesses in the absence of a summer season, Potter said.
About 64.5 per cent of all Canadians have received one COVID-19 vaccine dose, while about 12.5 per are fully vaccinated, according to one vaccine tracker.
More than 52 per cent of all Americans have received one dose, while roughly 43 per cent are fully vaccinated, government data shows.
The airline industry has been among the hardest hit, with Air Canada alone losing roughly $5.3 billion in 2020 and the first quarter of 2021. But sympathy for management may be in short supply after they received $10 million in bonuses following more than 20,000 employee layoffs and hundreds of millions in federal wage subsidies for the company -- and shortly before an aid package worth up to $5.9 billion announced in April.
Air Canada said last week its handful of senior executives had opted to return their "pandemic mitigation bonus" totalling nearly $2 million after public backlash and chiding from Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland. But the remaining $8 million spread among some 900 managers is staying put.
NDP finance critic Peter Julian brought forward a motion in the House of Commons on Monday calling on the government to require that Air Canada fully reimburse the $10 million and "cancel all approved bonuses for senior executives." Several Liberal MPs opposed the motion, which needed unanimous consent to pass.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 14, 2021.
The 2024 wildfire season has begun, and it's shaping up to follow last year's unprecedented destruction in kind, with thousands of square kilometres already consumed.
Veteran TSN broadcaster Darren 'Dutch' Dutchyshen, one of Canada’s best-known sports journalists, has died. He was 57. His family says 'he passed as he was surrounded by his closest loved ones.'
A ‘lifetime of abuse’ led Dallas Ly to snap and repeatedly stab his mother inside their Leslieville apartment in 2022 but he never intended to kill her, his defence lawyers argued during at his murder trial in Toronto on Thursday.
A burgeoning track star says his dream of going to the Olympics is being derailed by a deportation order after Immigration officials rejected his family’s claim for asylum
A Montreal father who kidnapped his daughter who has autism and lied to police when they asked where she was should serve three years in prison, a Crown prosecutor said.
Loblaw Cos. Ltd. said Thursday it's ready to sign on to the grocery code of conduct, paving the way for an agreement that's been years in the making.
A medical examiner says a Massachusetts teen who participated in a spicy tortilla chip challenge died from ingesting a substance 'with a high capsaicin concentration.'
To give Canadians a break on their summer road trips, Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre is calling on Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to suspend all gas and diesel taxes from Victoria Day to Labour Day.
Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly is imposing sanctions on Israelis she accuses of 'extremist settler violence' in the West Bank, three months after pledging to do so.
A Starbucks fan — whose name is Winter — is visiting Canada on a purposeful journey that began with a random idea at one of the coffee chain's stores in Texas.
Members of Piapot First Nation, students from the University of Winnipeg and various other professionals are learning new techniques that will hopefully be used for ground searches of potential unmarked grave sites in the future.
ALS patient Mathew Brown said he’s hopeful for future ALS patients after news this week of research at Western University of a potential cure for ALS.
When Adam Kirschner wrote 'Slap Shot,' he never imagined the song would be embraced by his favourite team.
A team is ready to help an entangled North Atlantic right whale in the Gulf of St. Lawrence.
A $200 reward is being offered by a North Vancouver family for the safe return of their beloved chicken, Snowflake.
Two daughters and a mother were reunited online 40 years later thanks to a DNA kit and a Zoom connection despite living on three separate continents and speaking different languages.
Mother's Day can be a difficult occasion for those who have lost or are estranged from their mom.
YES Theatre Young Company opened its acclaimed kids’ show, One Small Step, at Sudbury Theatre Centre on Saturday.