
Fully-vaccinated Ontario couple says they fought 'stupid with stupid' to get out of quarantine order at border
CBC
What began for Eric and Kerri Langer as a quick trip to check on their New York property turned into a week-long struggle to reverse an unexpected quarantine order, all because their ArriveCAN app didn't load when they tried to cross back home.
Their "ridiculous" problem ended with a "ridiculous" solution, the fully vaccinated Coburg, Ont., couple said. On Thursday they found themselves driving back into the U.S. and then re-entering Canada so they could re-show their proof of vaccination papers to an officer.
The second time around their papers were accepted and they were no longer required to quarantine.
"Look it, we had to fight stupid with stupid here," Eric said while driving home afterwards.
The couple's experience is one of many CBC News has reported on in recent months that demonstrate ongoing confusion and skepticism surrounding Canada's land border rules.
This summer, several travellers reported getting robocalls reminding them to quarantine even if they weren't required to. One person was fined more than $6,000 when he forgot his email password at the border and was unable to retrieve his negative test results. And in October a Toronto man said he'd been sent other people's test results and personal information even though he hadn't travelled for months.
"In the court of law, we would have a right to defend ourselves," Kerri said. "Here, you're proven guilty and there is no way of proving your innocence."
The Langers entered the U.S. last weekend to visit their Lake Placid home for the first time since the pandemic began. They said they made sure to be well-versed on Canada's travel rules and kept the trip under 72 hours so they wouldn't be required to show a negative COVID-19 test result.
But when they pulled up to the Thousand Islands Border Crossing to return home Monday morning, the ArriveCAN app with their proof of vaccination wouldn't load on Eric's phone, he said. The officer refused to look at their printed documents and ordered they quarantine for two weeks.
As a teacher at a short-staffed elementary school, Kerri said taking that much time off work wasn't an option. So, when they got home, Eric started making calls to elected officials, the Public Health Agency of Canada and Canadian Border Services Agency.
"The resolution should have been somebody calls to verify that we are indeed vaccinated," Eric said. "Boom. The quarantine is lifted. But there's nobody. There's no information. It's crazy."
After a few days of persistent phone calls, he said he reached a CBSA supervisor who advised that even though they were under a quarantine order, they were allowed to drive into the U.S. and back again. If they showed a CBSA officer the right documentation, the order would be lifted. They said a public health official also confirmed that was the case.
"I think the ridiculousness of today is that I couldn't get in my car and drive to the [grocery store] but I could get into my car and drive across the border and that was OK," Kerri said.
Kelly Sundberg, a professor at Mount Royal University who spent 15 years as an officer with the Canada Border Services Agency, said this case exemplifies the issues raised in the auditor general's scathing report this week about the federal government's testing requirements for travellers.