B.C. premier says changes to U.S. cruise ship rules remain temporary
VICTORIA — British Columbia’s premier says legislation proposed in the United States that would scrap a long-standing requirement for American cruise ships to dock at a foreign port between domestic stops doesn’t change the fact people want to visit B.C.
The “machinations of U.S. politics” on a given day don’t change the draw for people to travel up B.C.’s coast, said Premier John Horgan, adding he doesn’t believe there’s anything the B.C. government can do about decisions made in the U.S. Senate.
Horgan told a news conference on Friday that he’s passionate about making sure B.C. can welcome visitors once pandemic-related travel restrictions are lifted, but he doesn’t “regret not yelling louder at people who would not have been listening.”
Utah Sen. Mike Lee has introduced three bills to repeal and reform the 135-year-old Passenger Vessel Services Act, saying in a statement this week that it’s an “outdated, protectionist law” that benefits Canada and harms American jobs.

