Search

GDPR Compliance

We use cookies to ensure you get the best experience on our website. By continuing to use our site, you accept our use of cookies, Privacy Policy, and Terms of Service.

Feds ‘happy to work’ with Ontario after request to halt arrival of international students

Published on April 30, 2021 at 09:33 PM

Canada may consider halting the arrival of international students in Ontario, prime minister Justin Trudeau said following a request from Ontario premier Doug Ford.

During a press conference Friday, Trudeau acknowledged Ford's request to suspend the arrival of international students to the province and confirmed they'll be “reaching out to their officials today to formalize that request.”

Read more: ‘Desperate’ Ford to Trudeau at First Ministers’ Meeting: Shut the borders

“Premier Ford asked that we suspend the arrival of international students,” he said, adding, “because at this time Ontario is the only province requesting this, we’re happy to work more narrowly with them.”

Global News reported Thursday that Ford had urged the prime minister to tighten international and provincial borders.

Canada closed its U.S. land and sea borders to non-essential travellers over one year ago in an effort to curb cases of the virus.

However, over the past few weeks, several provinces have called for tightened restrictions and measures when it comes to international travel to curb the spread of more deadly and transmissible variants spreading across the country.

“We are looking at a range of potential measures either targeting certain areas of types of travellers. We are going to be working with experts and authorities across the country to ensure what we are doing is grounded in science and will keep people safe,”; Trudeau had said in an interview with Global News on April 21.

Read more: Provinces want tightened travel, land border restrictions to limit COVID-19 variants: Legault

The prime minister reiterated on Friday his intentions of working closely with the provinces to quell the spread of the coronavirus and cautioned against any kind of non-essential travel.

“We're engaging with other provinces that are hit hard by this third wave to see how we can help. We are ready to send any resources needed to protect you and your family,” he said.

“Again, I want to be clear. This is not the right time to travel,” the prime minister added.

More to come.

Prev Article

Lindsay man charged after rash of vehicle thefts in City of Kawartha Lakes

Next Article

Teen in London charged with stunt driving after motorcycle clocked going double the speed limit

Related to this topic:

Comments (0):

Be the first to write a comment.

Post Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *