US extends restrictions at Canada, Mexico borders

US extends restrictions at Canada, Mexico borders

Four generations of the Sperling family of Chiiliwack, Surrey and Linden, WA, gathered for Mother's Day along the Canada-U.S. border, closed to non-essential travel due to coronavirus disease (COVID-19) restrictions in Langley, British Columbia, Canada May 10, 2020.


WASHINGTON/OTTAWA--The United States, Mexico and Canada said on Tuesday they would extend a ban on non-essential cross-border travel by another 30 days to help fight the coronavirus.


  The U.S. Department of Homeland Security said the land-border restrictions, first imposed in mid-March and previously set to expire on Wednesday, would now be extended until June 22 for both Canada and Mexico.
  "This is an important decision that will keep people in both of our countries safe," Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said of the U.S.-Canada measures. Mexico's Foreign Ministry confirmed the 30-day extension.
  The United States also said on Tuesday it would extend pandemic-related rules that permit rapid deportations of migrants caught at U.S. borders, according to a U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention health emergency order. The rules, first issued in March and renewed in April, will be extended for an indefinite period but be reviewed by U.S. health officials every 30 days, according to the order.
  Relations between Canada and the United States have steadily improved since a low point in June 2018, when President Donald Trump accused Trudeau of being weak.
  The restrictions do not cover trade across a U.S.-Canada border that stretches 5,525 miles (8,891 km). Trudeau said that once non-essential travel restarted, Canada would need "to have strong measures in place."
  Acting U.S. Homeland Security chief Chad Wolf said Washington would examine how Canada and Mexico were handling the outbreak.
  "What we don't want to do is try to open up parts of our economy and have a lot of folks coming across the border that we haven't seen in the past 50 or 60 days," he told a U.S. Chamber of Commerce event.
  Wolf said non-essential travel had fallen by 60 to 70%. Air travel is not affected by the order.

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