Despite Delta, Canada welcomes back fully vaxxed U.S. citizens, permanent residents
WASHINGTON — Fully vaccinated American citizens lined up at the Canada-U.S. border Monday for their first chance to venture north since the COVID-19 pandemic forced the two countries to impose unprecedented travel restrictions nearly 17 months ago.
At the Peace Bridge in Buffalo, N.Y., cars were already lining up when Canada’s exemption for fully vaccinated U.S. citizens and permanent residents kicked in shortly after midnight. Eligible travellers must have allowed 14 days to pass since their last dose of a Health Canada-approved vaccine.
As the supper hour approached Monday, wait times across the country varied widely. It was taking a mind-numbing seven hours to get over the Fort Frances bridge between northern Ontario and Minnesota, and two hours to enter St. Stephen, N.B., from Maine.
Normally busier entry points like the Peace Bridge, the Queenston-Lewiston Bridge and the Rainbow Bridge in Niagara Falls were all reporting delays of less than an hour, if any. Canada Border Services Agency officials urged travellers to exercise patience.

