End of COVID-19 testing for travellers entering Canada a 'lifeline' for Windsor-Essex tourism
CBC
The expected end of pre-arrival COVID-19 testing for travellers entering Canada will be a "lifeline" for tourism in the Windsor area, the head of Tourism Windsor-Essex said Wednesday.
The federal government is expected to announce the new policy on Thursday, with sources telling CBC News that Canada will remove the testing requirements at land border crossings, and airports.
Currently, travellers entering Canada must show proof of a negative test prior to their flight, or arrival at the border; that requirement is expected to be dropped by the end of March.
"This is a gigantic step forward to that path to reopening that we've been looking at," said Tourism Windsor-Essex CEO Gordon Orr. "It's a lifeline to our American visitation."
One example, Orr said, is Caesars Windsor: about 33 per cent of visitors to the casino are from the U.S.
Americans account for 25 per cent of visitors to wineries in the Windsor-Essex area, as well, he said.
Orr said the Windsor-Essex hospitality sector is also "very eager" to see more U.S. visitors.
"This is removing the hassles," he said of the new border testing policy. "This is removing the conditions to make that flow of visitor transport back and forth that much easier, and it's welcome news indeed."
Sarnia Mayor Mike Bradley also supported the change, and said a group of mayors of border cities sent a letter to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau more than a week ago asking for the testing requirement to be dropped.
"We were working with the hospitality industry and the tourism sector, and people start to plan their vacations for the spring and the summer now," he said. "And with the testing still in place, it was an impediment."
"With its being gone as of April 1, if that's correct, it will start to open the gates to more tourism coming back into this country," Bradley said. "It's going to take time because people are getting used to this new life after COVID. But it does get rid of one substantial barrier to come into Canada."
However, he said he'd like to see the requirement dropped sooner.
"I think they can ... end it right now," Bradley said. "There's no reason to keep on making people go through this process to the end of the month when they're acknowledging it's simply not necessary."
Rakesh Naidu, president of the Windsor-Essex Regional Chamber of Commerce, agreed that the timeline should be moved up.