P.E.I. to remain closed to non-residents as COVID-19 restrictions eased - Action News
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PEI

P.E.I. to remain closed to non-residents as COVID-19 restrictions eased

This summer, hotels and beaches on P.E.I. will remain quiet and empty, thanks to the province's COVID-19 restrictions.

'One of our biggest risks is the importation of the virus,' says chief public health officer

Provincial health department workers stop traffic that has crossed the Confederation Bridge in Borden-Carleton, P.E.I. on Sunday, March 22. Anyone arriving on Prince Edward Island from another province is told to self-isolate for 14 days. (Andrew Vaughan/The Canadian Press)

Every summer, Cavendish, P.E.I., transforms from a sleepy seaside village of just 300 residents into a resort area teeming with thousands of tourists trying to connect with the red shores and shining waters described in Anne of Green Gables.

But this summer, hotels and beaches will remain quiet and empty, thanks to the province's COVID-19 restrictions a scene Dan James, owner of Kindred Spirits Inn and Cottages, says will be unfamiliar and eerie.

It's just reinforcing the brand that we're safe, that we havesuch a low rate of infection.- Dan James

"Having grown up there and having lived year-round there for a lot of my life, come the middle of September it becomes a ghost town, so it's going to be really strange to have that ghost-town feeling in the middle of June."

James says he has cancelled any plans to see customers in May and June because of the pandemic, as 97 per cent of his business comes from visitors who now cannot travel to the Island.

"We are looking at significant losses of bookings. They just stopped at the end of February and the cancellations have piled up since then," he said.

"We've lost a significant portion of our business."

No entry to non-residents

Prince Edward Island will remain closed to non-residents for the foreseeable future as it begins easing COVID-19 restrictions a measure that is protecting P.E.I. residents but blocking one of the province's biggest industries.

P.E.I. Premier Dennis King has announced a four-phase plan that will start with limited expansions of freedoms and build up to restaurants and many other businesses and services reopening by mid-June.

Phase 1 of the plan begins Friday, allowing some elective surgeries and health screenings to resume as well as gatherings ofup to five people outside at two-metre distances. Recreationalactivities like golf and fishing can also resume.

There are currently no plans to lift the restrictions at P.E.I.'s entry points. (Andrew Vaughan/The Canadian Press)

That P.E.I. is an island with only three entry points has helped to keep the virus contained to only 27 cases, no hospitalizations, no deaths and no community spread of the disease, King said.

But keeping the province's boundaries closed to protect Islanders' health means keeping out the more than 1.5 million tourists who visit the island every year.

King says this will have major impacts on many businesses and workers and province's economy as a whole.

Economic impact could outlast virus

In 2019, tourist spending generated approximately $505 million for the provincial economy.

"Tourism is one of our three big sectors in terms of driving theeconomy, so the economic impact of this will be felt long past whenthe virus is in the rear-view mirror," King said in an interview with The Canadian Press Wednesday.

"For now our job is to try to keep people safe and healthy and to try to work with people in the industries, such as tourism, to devise a plan to get back on the road to some kind of normal,knowing very well that's going to be a difficult road."

Premier Dennis King says he hopes Islanders do take his 'FU COVID' comments as a rallying cry, to help them fight through what has been a difficult couple of months. (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press)

P.E.I.'s plans are unique in that they call for the province tocontinue to keep its provincial borders closed to any non-residents,allowing only health-care providers and essential workers, such astruck drivers delivering goods, to cross the Confederation Bridge.

The province implemented screening measures at all three pointsof entry in late March, and has been turning away anyone who isn't afull-time resident, including people who own summer cottages inP.E.I.

Any residents who have travelled within Canada orinternationally are ordered to self-isolate for 14 days uponreturning. Provincial officials have been making regular phone callsto check up on the 2,087 people currently in quarantine to ensurethey follow the rules.

Importation 'one of our biggest risks'

The province's chief public health officer, Dr. Heather Morrison, saidWednesday these screening measures are examples of how Prince EdwardIsland's plans to reopen its economy will look different from plansthat may be implemented in other provinces.

"One of our biggest risks is the importation of the virus, sothe plan for easing up restrictions here is fairly uniquely based onthe fact we can control our points of entry," she said.

"That will be really important making sure those restrictionsstay in place as we go forward."

Dr. Heather Morrison says it will be important to keep the restrictions at the Island's entry points in order to stem the spread of COVID-19. (Shane Hennessey/CBC)

King says he recognizes this means the damage to the tourismsector will deepen, which will require a "significant amount ofgovernment investment."

King says he has had a good working relationship with PrimeMinister Justin Trudeau, but he expressed frustration at the waysome of the COVID-19 aid efforts are being rolled out.

New federal programs that involve provincial components are beingannounced with little consultation, which sometimes createsdiscrepancies between the help that's needed and what's on offer,King said.

"I do think going forward we are going to have to see a littlebit greater co-operation and really... some ingenuity as to how wefigure our way through this."

During the weekly calls between Trudeau and the premiers, Kingsays he has also raised concern about the Canada Emergency ResponseBenefit and the similarly designed student benefit creating adisincentive for people to work.

Seasonal economy

He would have rather seen the federal government give money tonon-government organizations and businesses to allow them to hirepeople to help "kick-start the economy."

Given that P.E.I.'s three biggest industries agriculture,tourism and fishing are all seasonal, there are also concernsabout how federal emergency assistance programs could impactseasonal workers who rely on employment insurance to get themthrough the winter months.

P.E.I.'s three main industries agriculture, tourism and fishing are all seasonal, raising concerns about workers who rely on employment insurance to get them through the winter months. (Brian McInnis)

With no EI-insurable earnings generated in the summer, they willbe in trouble.

"That's going to be another big, big problem for us heading intothe winter and what could be the second wave of COVID," King said.

'P.E.I. is my safe place'

Meanwhile in Cavendish, James says he is in favour of P.E.I.'splans to keep its borders closed, even though it is hurting his business.

Not only is it good for the health and safety of Islanders, butit sustains P.E.I.'s reputation as a pristine sanctuary.

"We have a number of guests from New York City, for instance,who are emailing us saying, 'I will do anything to come up thereright now. P.E.I. is my safe place,"' James said.

"It's just reinforcing the brand that we're safe, that we havesuch a low rate of infection."

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