Ontario says federal border measures ‘broken’, Alberta eyes curfew for COVID hotspots
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Ontario Premier Doug Ford scrapped over international border measures Friday while officials in two of Alberta’s COVID-19 hotspots sought clarification over a possible curfew being floated to tame that province’s surge.
Fresh fears over more infectious variants, travel-related cases and the ability of the country’s vaccine rollout to keep pace sparked scrutiny into pandemic strategy in various parts of the country, with Trudeau and Ford butting heads over rules at the border.
Trudeau dismissed Ford’s claims that Canada’s “borders are broken,” maintaining that there are already tight controls on land crossings, including tests before and after arriving in Canada and mandatory two-week quarantines.
“We know importation through the borders is extremely low in terms of cases in the country — it’s not zero,” Trudeau told a news conference Friday. “But at the same time, we have seen that this third wave is very much around community transmission.”


