Too many tourists, too few masks in sight in Gasp's vacation hot spots - Action News
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Too many tourists, too few masks in sight in Gasp's vacation hot spots

Municipalities in the Gasp region are sending public health workers to crowded tourist attractions to ask visitors reluctant to wear masks to respect COVID-19 measures.

Region's public health director asks visitors to be cautious, wear masks and respect physical distancing

Jean-Franois Gavioli has faced angry insults from some people when he tells them they must wear a mask in his store. (Julia Page/CBC)

Lisa Bond opened her craft and gift shop on Gasp's main street just one month ago, selling jewelry and T-shirts she designs herself.

Only about half of the customers who walk into her boutiquewear a mask these days, and when they do, they are usually locals, Bond said.

"The locals seem to be following it much more carefully, and it's a good thing: we have to protect ourselves."

Bond isn't personally a fan of wearing a mask, but she says she'll enforce the rule that face coverings must be worn in indoor public spaces as of Saturday.

Like many business owners in Gasp, she's had to walk the line between the desire to welcome tourists and protecting her community from COVID-19.

Lisa Bond, a business owner in Gasp, said shell abide by the new government rules on masks even though shed prefer it remain a personal choice. (Julia Page, CBC)

There have been only nine deaths from COVID in her region, nearly all of them linked to a single outbreak in a nursing home in the town of Maria. Many tourists are coming from Montreal, Canada's epicentre of the disease, where more than 3,400 people have died since the start of the pandemic.

Jean-Franois Gavioli, the owner of March de Saveurs Gaspsiennes, made masks mandatory in his small grocery store months ago, because he knew there wasn't enough space to respect the two-metre distancing rule.

He said most people both locals and tourists have been understanding, but some have thrown him "all the insults you can think of," he said. He's even been called an "imbecile."

"They can gladly shop elsewhere."

Tourists from the rest of Quebec are thronging to the Gasp Peninsula, but locals say many are ignoring COVID-19 prevention measures. (Julia Page/CBC)

'Hostility' in certain shops

The narrow sidewalks of Perc, one of Gasp's top tourist destinations, are filled with visitors anxious to get a glimpse of the iconic Perc Rock.

Frdric Garant and his family, visiting from Terrebonne, stood out from the crowd with their colourful masks, as they entered a small souvenir shop on Perc's main drag.

"We've been told by people in the boutiques and everywhere that we're one of the few that wear masks," said Garant.

"It's a bit unfortunate, but there's not really anything we can do, other than what we're doing now."

Frdric Garant, with his sons Benjamin and Raphal, were visiting Perc and said they all wear masks when they enter businesses during the holiday in Gasp. (Julia Page/CBC)

Perc Mayor Cathy Poirier said she's frustrated that so many visitors are ignoring the hygiene rules, such as hand-washing before entering a business.

"Right now there is a lot of hostility inside the shops," Poirier told Radio-Canada. "It's unfortunate and harmful. There are rules and these are individual responsibilities."

So much so that municipalities in the Gasp region are sending public health employees to crowded tourist attractions to ask visitors to respect COVID-19 measures.

Visitors nonetheless welcome

The tourist season in Gasp normally reaches its peak during the two-week construction holiday that starts this weekend.

But with travel to the United States off limits, the region is already seeing a steady flow of tourists.

Tracy Major, the co-ordinator of the Kempffer Cultural Interpretation Centre in New Carlisle, said tourists from other parts of the province have been coming earlier than usual this year.

Jrmy Laplante and Tracy Major, who work at the Kempffer Cultural Interpretation Centre in New Carlisle, have had to adapt the centres historical tour to meet COVID-19 rules. (Julia Page/CBC)

The cultural centre also serves as a gathering place for the local English-speaking community, and Major has been hearing from older members who are concerned that tourists could bring the virus with them.

"It is worrisome because we are a small place," said Major. "We are far from the bigger centres with the larger capacity hospitals."

"But the show must go on," said Major. The centre is giving out masks to people at the entrance and has set up hand-washing stations.

Yv Bonnier-Viger, the public health director for Gaspsie-les-de-la-Madeleine, sees no problems with visitors going to Gasp, as long as they are mindful of the hygiene rules put in place to avoid transmission of COVID-19. (Julia Page/CBC)

The region's public health director, Dr. Yv Bonnier-Viger, said respecting those rules is the key to being able to welcome tourists this year.

His team did a mathematical simulation to explore what could be the potential impact of opening the region to tourism.

"Visitors are not really a threat," he said. However, if people abandon the measures they've learned over the past few months "they can push the virus to come again."

The tourist season in Gasp got an early start this year, with more visitors arriving at the beginning of July, according to several business owners. (Julia Page/CBC)

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