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canada vaccine

Beginning Monday, June 20, travellers taking a train or plane departing from Canada will no longer need to show their proof of vaccination against COVID-19 to board. The federal government said the change to Canada's travel rules is possible because of, among other things, widespread vaccination and stable rates of infection and hospitalization.

The change also comes as officials scramble to reduce long wait times at airports.

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Canada will move to a new definition of what it means to be "fully protected" against COVID-19, federal Health Minister Jean-Yves Duclos announced at a press conference Wednesday.

He explained that "although two doses still protect significantly well against severe disease and death, two doses are not enough now to protect against infection and transmission."

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A change to Canada's travel restrictions means that, as of June 20, travellers will no longer need to be fully vaccinated to board a flight or train in Canada.

However, vaccination requirements will stay in place at the border. So, Canadian citizens and permanent residents who are not fully vaccinated will still need to undergo pre-entry tests and 14-day quarantines with testing on days one and eight.

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In the third week of the Ottawa trucker convoy protest, the movement is getting negative reviews from Canadians at large, a survey from the Angus Reid Institute shows.

69% of the 1,622 Canadians who responded to the online survey said they oppose protesters' "approach and behaviour." 64% opposed their "demand to end all pandemic restrictions," even as several provinces move to speed up the gradual return to "more normal lives."

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At a press conference on Friday, February 11, federal Health Minister Jean-Yves Duclos described the conditions that would make "living with the virus" possible in Canada.

Officials have begun to throw the phrase around to describe the next phase of health measures. In a remarkable move, Quebec Premier François Legault said on February 8 that a slow withdrawal of many of the most stringent restrictions means that Quebecers could see something resembling a "more normal life" by mid-March.

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The Sûreté du Québec (SQ) is warning of possible traffic on Quebec roads as a trucker convoy heads towards Ottawa on Friday and Saturday, January 27 and 28. The provincial police force says it's deploying officers to affected areas to "avoid any overflow" as truck drivers approach the capital. It's asking residents to plan their trips before departing.

Drivers are converging on Ottawa in protest of the federal government's vaccination requirement for truck drivers entering Canada. Unvaccinated truckers crossing the border are still allowed in the country if they're citizens, permanent residents, or registered under the Indian Act, but have to follow testing and quarantine requirements. These rules took effect on January 15.

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