Reopening the Canada-U.S. border will be a long, piecemeal process
Aaron Wherry
6 hrs ago
The Donald Trump era began in
2015 with a promise to build a wall between the United States and
Mexico. Five years later, the Trump era may end with citizens in
much of the rest of the world — Canadians, in particular —
insisting on a virtual wall between themselves and the United
States.
With
the United States adding 40,000 new cases of COVID-19 each day, the
European
Union is leaving the U.S. off a list of 15 countries
whose citizens soon will be allowed to visit its 27 member
nations. In Canada, there seems to be no great desire to quickly
reverse the unprecedented
border restrictions that were imposed in March.
The
question for Canadians is how much longer the virtual wall will
have to be in place — and how much it might hurt to keep it
there.
"My
guess is it's going to have to stay closed for more than 12
months," Colin Furness, an epidemiologist at the University of
Toronto, told CBC News
this week.
"It's hard to imagine what's going to happen in the United
States until we have a vaccine or until the population has been
sufficiently infected that you have herd immunity."
Canadians are in no rush to reopen
See The Stairlift That Seniors Can Finally Afford
When Leger Marketing asked Canadians in May when they thought Canada should reopen its border with the United States, 47 per cent of respondents said "not before the end of the year." With more than 2.6 million cases now in the United States, it's unlikely Canadians' enthusiasm for welcoming our American neighbours has increased since then.
An
exemption for "essential" travel significantly reduced
the disruption to the Canadian economy. "Canadians continue to
get the food, medicine, commercial goods, and other essential
supplies they need to live and work, and Canadian exporters for the
most part have not suffered disruption," said Goldy
Hyder, president and CEO of the Business Council of Canada.
But
the decline in traffic across the border has still been
precipitous. According to data
obtained by Postmedia,
between June 15 and June 21 just 170,998 people entered Canada
at a land crossing with the United States — and 104,247 of
those people were truck drivers. Over the same period in 2019, more
than 1.2 million people traveled through a land crossing from the
U.S. into Canada.
Based
on those numbers, the pandemic is going to leave a deep mark
on the Canadian tourism industry and on border
towns like Windsor and Sarnia,
Ontario. Hyder and the Business Council have called on the federal
government to extend its wage subsidy for the tourism sector
through the rest of the year.
The damage could be lasting
But
it can't be assumed that the exemption for essential business
travel and widespread use of video conferencing are preventing
all damage to the economic relationships between Canadians and
Americans.
"People
say, okay, well, the trucks are going, so the supply chains are
working. But the supply chains reflect agreements and contracts
that were made in the past with a lot of face-to-face interaction,"
said Bill Anderson, director of the Cross-Border Institute in
Windsor. "If those agreements aren't being made now, the
question is — what's the supply chain going to look like six
months to a year from now?"
It
also can't be assumed that cross-border travel will quickly return
to its pre-COVID-19 normal once the threat of the disease has
passed, Anderson added. Traffic between Canada and the United
States dropped significantly after 9/11 and had yet to fully return
to previous levels when the pandemic hit.
Beyond
the economic concerns, there are the personal plights —
the families still being kept apart by the border
restrictions. An exemption introduced in June only applies to
"immediate" family members such as spouses, parents,
children and guardians.
A pandemic running rampant in the U.S.
But
all complications associated with the current restrictions must be
balanced against the significant health risks of reopening the
border — and the economic disruption that would occur if there is
a resurgence of COVID-19 in Canada.
Furness said his
suggestion of 12 months was not meant to be perfectly precise.
"It's a very, very rough idea," he said. "I just
want people to get used to the idea that maybe it's not going to be
next week or next month."
But
his projection is based on a belief that COVID-19 has now spread
too far in the United States for it to be contained. "My
assumption is that the genie is so far out of the bottle that there
isn't even a bottle anymore," he said.
In
these circumstances, it might be hard for any industry or community
to argue that the border should be reopened. But accepting that a
return to normal is unlikely in the near future could
refocus the discussion on what, if anything, can be done to
find a new normal that is even just slightly less restrictive.
Baby steps
"I
don't think the solution is to say, 'Let's pick out a date and say,
OK, the border is now open.' In fact, I would say that maybe 'open'
is the wrong term to use," said Anderson, who is also thinking
of COVID-19 as a long-term problem. "I think what you need to
do is try to find rational and safe ways to ease some of the
restrictions."
Anderson
said that expanded testing (likely conducted away from the
border crossings themselves) might allow some travellers to
cross if they can show that they have recently tested negative. The
effectiveness of that approach, of course, would depend on the
accuracy of the testing.
Laurie
Trautman, director of the Border Policy Research Institute at West
Washington University, said the current exemption for family
members could be broadened to include extended family like
grandparents. Furness also would look at family unification.
"I
really would like us to revisit that with a long view,"
Furness said of the current policy on family members. "To say,
'This is going to be in place for a long time, now how can we
alleviate the worst of the suffering?'"
© Ben Nelms/CBC
Two friends embrace during a visit at the Canada-U.S. Douglas-Peace
Arch border crossing in Surrey, British Columbia on Wednesday,
April 24, 2019.
If
that meant a lot more people crossing the border, then testing
could be a useful policy, Furness said. But he suggests that what
is currently a "tiny trickle" of cross-border travellers
should only be allowed to become a "slightly bigger trickle"
— no tourists or unnecessary business travel. He said
international students should still be allowed to enter Canada, but
he would like greater clarity on what constitutes "essential"
travel.
The
border restrictions put in place in March have been extended three
times and are now set to expire on July 21 — officially, at
least. Even if the deal is only extended for another month, it's
likely time to accept that a largely closed border between Canada
and the United States is, like the disease itself, going to be our
reality for the foreseeable future — and to plan
accordingly.
"Right
now I think everyone's responsibility is to figure out how we're
going to live with this thing," Anderson says. "Because
it might not go away for a long time."
No comments:
Post a Comment