Students wait to hear if coronavirus will cancel March break trip to Italy - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 09:05 PM | Calgary | -11.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
New Brunswick

Students wait to hear if coronavirus will cancel March break trip to Italy

Dozens of high school students in New Brunswick are anxiously waiting to hear if their March break trip to Italy will proceed, given the outbreak of coronavirus in the northern part of the European country.

EF Tours will allow groups to rebook without penalty after more than 220 confirmed cases of COVID-19, 7 deaths

Saint John student Patrick MacDonald said he hopes his March break trip to Italy will go ahead as scheduled on Thursday. (Roger Cosman/CBC)

Dozens of high school students in New Brunswick are anxiously waiting to hear if their March break trip to Italy will proceed, given the outbreak of COVID-19in the northern part of theEuropean country.

There are more than 220confirmed cases of the coronavirusin Italy, and seven reported deaths.

Authorities havequarantined a dozen towns in the northern regions of Lombardy and Veneto, andbanned public gatherings across a wide area to try to stop the virusfrom spreading.

Patrick MacDonald, a Grade 12 student at Harbour View High School in Saint John, spent months saving upfor the $4,000 trip and is scheduled to fly out on Thursday,with connections to Milan the capital of the Lombardy region.

But he said students and chaperones heard from two organizer teachers on Monday that the trip may be cancelled.

"It is a trip of a lifetime ... and I will be disappointed if it's cancelled,but it's for my safety, if so." he said.

The trips are being organized by EF Educational Tours Canada.

The company didn't say how many people from New Brunswickhave already paidto go, but the groups include students from Harbour View High School, St. Malachy'sHigh School andSimondsHigh School in Saint John, Sussex Regional High Schooland Moncton's Bernice MacNaughtonHigh School, as well as teachers, parents and chaperones.

EF Educational Tours Canada has been monitoring the outbreak of COVID-19 around the world closely, said company spokesperson Adam Bickelman.

Waiting to hear if coronavirus will cancel March break trip

5 years ago
Duration 1:18
Some high school students in New Brunswick are waiting to hear if their March break trip to Italy will still take place, given the outbreak of coronavirus in the northern part of the country.

"After the increase in new cases reported yesterday, we are allowing groups scheduled to travel to the most significantly impacted regions through March 31 to rebook without penalty," right up to the day of departure, he saidin an emailed statement.

Options include delaying the trip, changing destinations within the existing itinerary orchanging the itinerary entirely, including to domestic options, ortaking a "refund" in the form of a transferable travel voucher.

"Groups typically work together to decide which flexible alternative is best for their group,"said Bickelman.

If the Canadian government issues a travel advisory, the company "wouldsteer all scheduled groups towards the flexible alternatives as our policy is not to send tour groups to areas under such warnings."

Anglophone South School District superintendent Zoe Watson said international travel for high school students is not sanctioned by the school district. (Roger Cosman/CBC)

The planned trips to Italy are not school-sanctioned, according to Anglophone South School District superintendent Zoe Watson.

"Our school district would have trip guidelines and policies for high school students and middle school. We would sanction trips within Atlantic Canada... Ontario," she said.

"Some of our high schools go down as far as New York City and do theatre tours and that type of thing, but not at this time international travel."

Public health advised

Watson said she informed the Saint John region's medical officer of health, Dr. Kim Barker,that students from as many as five high schoolsmay be participating.

Now it's the group leaders who are expected to review their options and make a decision.

Patrick MacDonald said he expects to find out on Tuesday whether his tripwill be changed or cancelled.

In the meantime, he said he's packing and crossing his fingers that it will still go ahead.

"I'm really excited to see the Sistine Chapel. I've wanted to my entire life. Vatican City is so beautiful and I've admired pictures of the brilliant artwork," said MacDonald.

"So the artwork is really exciting to me, and I think the food is going to be great as well."

With files from Rachel Cave