Business

U.S. government won't say why it allows Canadians to fly to U.S. despite border closure

Despite the Canada-U.S. border closure to non-essential traffic, Canadians can still fly to the United States for leisure travel. The U.S. government declined to tell CBC News why.

Canadians can fly to the country but not drive - and many would like to know why

Canadians can fly to the U.S. for leisure travel, but the rule isn't reciprocal during the Canada-U.S. border closure during COVID-19. (Nam Y. Huh/The Associated Press)

It's a quirky rule that has confounded many people: while the Canada-U.S. land border is closed to non-essential traffic due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Canadians can still fly to the United States for leisure travel. 

"It's like having your front door locked but your back door wide open," said U.S. immigration lawyer Len Saunders, whose office sits close to the Canadian border in Blaine, Wash.

"It just doesn't make sense."

To add to the confusion, the flying rule isn't reciprocal: Canada bars American travellers from entering by any mode of transport, unless they get a special exemption

Saunders said he has been bombarded with calls from Canadians during the border closure inquiring about flying to the U.S.

"People are still calling me saying, 'I just want to clarify that this is OK. And why can I fly, but I can't drive?'"

CBC News asked the U.S. government that same question, but didn't get a response. 

U.S. immigration lawyer Len Saunders, who is based in Washington state, said he’s been swamped with calls from Canadians inquiring about flying to the U.S.

Foreign relations expert Edward Alden suggests the reason why Canadians can still fly to the U.S. may be rooted in the fact that, compared to Canada, the U.S. has less stringent travel restrictions for air passengers.

"The measures in the United States are just across the board far more relaxed," said Alden, a professor of U.S.-Canada economic relations at Western Washington University in Bellingham, Wash.

"[It's] certainly one of the reasons we have higher [COVID-19] case numbers."

'I could have walked'

To help stop the spread of COVID-19, Canada and the U.S. agreed in late March to close their shared land border to non-essential travel.

Since then, many Canadians have flown to the U.S, after discovering that it's still allowed. 

But the flying exemption has also sparked bewilderment.

Birgit Heinbach lives in Surrey, B.C., just seven kilometres from her American husband's home across the border in Blaine, Wash.

Because she can currently only fly to the U.S., Heinbach said it took seven hours and two flights — from Vancouver to Seattle and then Seattle to Bellingham — to get to her husband's home when she visited him in July. 

"The whole thing was ridiculous," she said. "I could have walked in my own little shoes — in 45 minutes — to my husband's house."

Birgit Heinbach with her American husband, Ian Geddes, at the Peace Arch border crossing between Surrey, B.C., and Blaine, Wash. The couple lives seven kilometres apart on opposite sides of the Canada-U.S. border. (Len Saunders)

Canadian snowbird Tamara Carmichael lives in a non-winterized mobile home in Leduc, Alta., in the summer. Her winter home sits in an RV park in Yuma, Ariz.

Although Carmichael can still fly to the U.S. this winter, she said that's not an option because she needs her truck to get around in Yuma, and can't afford the fee — upwards of $1,500 — to ship it. 

She argues the U.S. flying exemption is nonsensical because driving is a safer way to travel during the pandemic.

"Sticking everybody on an airplane is not a solution," said Carmichael. "You're packed into a tin can with a bunch of other people."

Canadian snowbird Tamara Carmichael said she doesn't understand why the U.S. still lets Canadians fly to the country when driving is a safer mode of travel during the pandemic. (Radio Canada/Olivier Periard)

According to a U.S. government document, it sanctioned the land border closure because "non-essential travel between the United States and Canada poses additional risk of [COVID-19] transmission."

CBC News asked several U.S. government departments and agencies why the government still welcomes Canadian air passengers. The Department of Transportation and Customs and Border Protection (CBP) referred CBC to the Department of Homeland Security's main office. That office and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention referred CBC to CBP.

No one provided an answer, despite repeated inquiries.

Experts offer theories

Alden theorizes that Canada — which has strict travel restrictions — prompted the land border closure, and that while the U.S. agreed, it had no desire to take it further. 

Canada has restricted most foreigners from entering the country by any mode of travel during the pandemic. But foreigners can still fly to the U.S. as long as they haven't visited Brazil, China, Iran, Ireland, the U.K. or 26 European countries in the Schengen Area 14 days prior. 

Canada was never added to that no-fly list. Neither was Mexico, even though Mexico and the U.S. have also agreed to close their shared land border to non-essential travel. 

"Generally, the United States has a much looser regime in terms of trying to keep out travellers," said Alden. "They don't see casual travellers as much of a threat, because they're worried about drugs and illegal migrants and terrorism."

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Alden also said that the U.S. may have reasoned it would be too cumbersome for the country's airlines to weed out the non-essential travellers if the country expanded its land border bans to air passengers.

"If you were going to make distinctions between essential and non-essential travellers, the airlines were going to have to be involved in some way."

Lawyer Saunders said he spoke this week with a senior U.S. CBP official who believes the U.S. still welcomes Canadian air passengers due to pressure from U.S. airlines to keep flights in operation.

"He said the airline industries would have lobbied hard when they were drafting this border closure," said Saunders.

But the actual reason why Canadians can fly to the U.S. remains a mystery — until and unless its government offers an explanation.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Sophia Harris

Business Reporter

Based in Toronto, Sophia Harris covers consumer and business for CBC News web, radio and TV. She previously worked as a CBC videojournalist in the Maritimes, where she won an Atlantic Journalism Award for her work. Got a story idea? Contact: sophia.harris@cbc.ca

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