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Politics

When international travel resumes, Canada's borders and airports will be very different

Just as the 9/11 attacks did 20 years ago, the COVID-19 pandemic will transform the way people travel internationally with hundreds of millions of dollars in new government spendingplanned formodernizingborder securityand updating public health measures at airports.

Airports are at capacity with just 5 per cent of pre-COVID traffic because of pandemic measures

Once international travel resumes, self-serve check in terminals like these at Ottawa International Airport will become part of a more hands-free travel experience. (The Canadian Press/Justin Tang)

Just as the 9/11 attacks did 20 years ago, the COVID-19 pandemic will transform the way people travel internationally with hundreds of millions of dollars in new government spendingplanned formodernizingborder securityand updating public health measures at airports.

In the recent federal budget, the federal government announced $82.5 million to fund COVID-19testing infrastructure at Canadian airports and another $6.7 million to buy sanitization equipment forthe Canadian Air Transport Security Authority.

Ottawa also has earmarked$656.1 million over five years to modernizeCanada's border security.

Daniel Gooch, president of the Canadian Airports Council, said the country's flight hubs still have no clear idea ofwhat is expected of them.

"We've been hoping to have meaningful discussions with government about how to do that for quite some time but,unfortunately, at this point we have no insight into what the different phases of restoration of air travel will look like," Gooch told CBC News.

Gooch said thatthe four Canadian airports that are still accepting international flights are operating at about five per cent of theirpre-COVID levels but with the current COVID-19 public health measures in place, they are at capacity.

"Part of the problem is the insistence on the two-metre physical distance," he said. "You very quickly hit capacity when you make that requirement. So we can't grow the numbers and keep everything the way it is right now. It's not physically possible."

Canada isn't permittingnon-essential internationaltravel yet although Canadians returning home and travellers with exemptions, such as essential workers, are allowed to enterCanada providing they follow certain protocols.

On Feb. 22, the federal government implemented new quarantine measures at airports requiring that all air travellers returning from non-essential trips abroadtake polymerase chain reaction tests commonly known asPCR tests 72 hours before they fly.

That test resulthas to be provided to the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) upon arrival. Travellers then need to take a second test and isolate in federally mandated facilities for up to 72 hours while they await the results.

Ultimately, it could be very good. It could be a much improved experience if we do it right and implement this all down the road.- Daniel Gooch

Gooch said that while the funding for testing infrastructure at airports is welcome, testing cannot continue to take place in airports oncepre-COVID levels of air travel return.

He said that offering passengers take-home tests,or directing arrivals to off-site testing centres close to the airport,would free up space in terminals and allowmore passengers to be processed.

"We were quite pleased to see in the federal budget the Canada Border Services Agency getting some significant funds for border modernization, which will include things like touchless technology and less contact in terms of interactions with border services," he said.

At the heart of the move to touchless travel is a trial the federal government is undertaking with the World Economic Forum and The Netherlands called the "Known Traveller Digital Identity" project, orKTDI.

The project began with the publication of a white paper back in 2018 and was seen as a way to modernize air travel by moving passengers through airports faster. That white paper said that a new, touchlesssystem was neededas the number of international air arrivals was expected to increase 50 per cent from 2016 to 2030.

With internationaltravel almost at a standstill now, the technology isseen as a way to facilitate a return to pre-COVID levels of air traffic.

The touchless travel experience

Under the KTDIplan, a digital form of identification is created that contains the traveller'sidentity, boarding passes, vaccination history and information on whether they've recovered from COVID-19. Travellers withKTDIdocumentationwould still have to face a customs officer, but all other points of contact in an airport could become touchless.

"We're still talking about a world where you'll need to carry your passport because it is an international border," said a senior CBSA official, speaking on background.

"We're not talking about replacing your passport. But the number of times you have to take out that document, or your boarding pass, to substantiate who you are and where you need to be, gets reduced."

Passengers wear face masks as they wait to go through security at Pierre Elliott Trudeau International Airport in Montreal. (Ryan Remiorz/The Canadian Press)

The official saidthe KTDI program is still in its early stages and technologicalissues are still being worked out. He said thatprivacy protectionswould have to be in placebefore any such system could be launched.

"It's not like the Government of Canada holds that information in a central place, or airlines hold it in a central place, or border agencies hold it in a central place," the official said."It's the traveller themselves that holds their own information."

Vaccinated vs. unvaccinated travellers

A CBSA spokesperson told CBC News that the $656.1 million federal investment inborder security modernization over five yearswill fund other "digital self-service tools" that will "reduce touchpoints" and create more "automated interactions" at Canadian airports

The CBSA said more information on those measures will be released to the public "in the coming weeks."

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is attending the G7 summitin the United Kingdom this weekend,where leaders are expected to discussinternational vaccination certification a so-called "vaccine passport".

The federal government has signaled alreadythat Canadians who have been fully vaccinated will be allowed to re-enter the country without having to stay in a government authorized quarantine hotel. Confirmingthe validity of those travellers' vaccination statuswill require some kind of vaccine passport like the KTDI program. Canada's airports like that idea.

Watch:Fully vaccinated Canadians can soon skip hotel quarantine:

Fully vaccinated Canadians can soon skip hotel quarantine

3 years ago
Duration 2:14
The federal government says it will soon ease restrictions for fully vaccinated Canadians and permanent residents returning from international travel.

"We're really leaning on vaccinated vs. unvaccinated. That's a place where you can have some differentiation of the travel experience to make it a little smoother, a little bit more pleasant for those who have been vaccinated. But we don't know yet what the government's plans are for that," Gooch said.

Once a traveller's vaccination can be verified, Gooch said, they can be treated differently perhaps bygiving thema single test upon arrival or before they depart,rather than themultiple tests requirednow.

While the exact changes to international travel are still being worked out, Gooch said the travel experience going forward will be very different fromthe past.

"Maybe you don't see an individual at all as you walk through the customs hall," he said. "Your verification is done through your facial ID, which is connected to your Known Traveller Digital Identification, which is connected to your digital health information and your digital travel documentation.

"Ultimately, it could be very good. It could be a much improved experience if we do it right and implement this all down the road."

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