
Residents in Whistler urge province to extend vaccination order to include ski passes, lift tickets
CBC
With just a few weeks left until ski resorts open in B.C., residents in Whistler say they are concerned about mingling with unvaccinated visitors this season and are urging the province to extend the vaccination mandate to include ski passes and lift tickets.
Small business owner Randall Jang says he's worried that COVID-19 cases will spike again once ski slopes open at the end of November.
Last season, Whistler Blackcomb was ordered to close in March by public health order in an effort to curb travel-related transmission of COVID-19.
"B.C. health should pass and extend the order to require proof of vaccination to buy a ski lift ticket," Jang told CBC News.
"If this community gets sick, it's going to put a very heavy burden on the health-care system and it's going to impact businesses and individuals working here."
Many Alberta resorts like Mount Norquay and Sunshine Village are requiring skiers and snowboarders to show proof of vaccination or a negative COVID-19 test, 72 hours before accessing the chairlift and resort.
Jang says he and other Whistler residents are specifically concerned about sharing enclosed gondolas with 10 to 24 people, with no vaccine proof, for the 25 minute ride to Blackcomb.
"We need the province to be proactive this time instead of reactive. We're about to pack children with strangers who may not be vaccinated," he said.
"The balance of probabilities historically points to higher cases once tourism opens up. We faced it and experienced this in Whistler and it will happen again."
Under the province's current health order, people over the age of five must wear a mask in all indoor public spaces and show proof of vaccination to access a range of non-essential businesses including restaurants, movie theatres and bars.
More than 8,000 people have signed a petition urging the province to change its policy and require vaccination proof before riding the ski lifts and gondolas.
"Almost everyone goes up the mountain in a gondola and they're very tight, confined and poorly ventilated spaces," Whistler resident and petition organizer John Konig said on the CBC's On the Coast.
"I'll say physical distancing is measured by inches in gondolas."
He said his biggest concern this ski season is the possible influx of unvaccinated visitors, which could lead to another outbreak and possible forced closures.