B.C. ends COVID-19 quarantine program for temporary foreign workers - Action News
Home WebMail Wednesday, November 13, 2024, 03:42 AM | Calgary | -1.0°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

B.C. ends COVID-19 quarantine program for temporary foreign workers

Employers are still required to ensure federal quarantine requirements are met for unvaccinated or partially vaccinated workers.

Self-isolation requirement kept for another year, with support available through next March

Migrant farm workers pick strawberries in a field.
Temporary foreign workers are no longer required to quarantine before arriving at farms. (Maggie MacPherson/CBC)

British Columbia's Agriculture Ministry says it is ending the COVID-19 quarantine program for temporary foreign workers but will keep a different program for another year to support self-isolation to curb the spread of the coronavirus.

The ministry says the program for seasonal agriculture workers will endThursday because of the easing of federal travel restrictions and high vaccination rates for incoming workers that allows them to go directly to their farms.

A statement says the employer must ensure federal quarantine requirements are met for unvaccinated or partially vaccinated workers.

Federal-provincial support for the self-isolation of temporary foreign workers will still be available until next March through a program that pays a maximum of $3,000 per employee, based on all the costs linked to a 14-day isolation period.

The ministry says its $47-million quarantine program protected B.C.'s food security during the pandemic by ensuring farms had access to the labour they needed and local food continued to be grown and harvested.

More than 15,000 temporary foreign workers went through the program and the ministry says 233 were diagnosed with COVID-19 while in quarantine.

"This shows the important role the program played in preventing workers with symptoms from travelling to farms and communities or causing larger outbreaks, as well as preventing associated economic losses and interruptions to the B.C. food supply,"the statement says.