US lifting vaccine mandate at Canadian, Mexican borders

The Biden administration announced vaccine requirements for truck drivers based in Canada and Mexico will end Friday, a move that could allow thousands of truckers to resume cross-border freight movements. 

The U.S. border vaccine mandate for foreign drivers began in January 2022. Canada ended its own border vaccination requirements in October.

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) announced: “Beginning May 12, DHS will no longer require non-U.S. travelers entering the U.S. via land ports of entry and ferry terminals to be fully vaccinated against COVID-19 and provide related proof of vaccination upon request. DHS intends to rescind these Title 19 travel restrictions in alignment with the end of the Public Health Emergency.”

The Private Motor Truck Council of Canada (PMTC) said removing the mandate would allow open travel for essential workers, such as truck drivers, regardless of vaccination status.

“This move will help to bring some drivers back into the cross-border trade and alleviate some supply chain constraints,” PMTC told TruckNews.com.

The Canadian Trucking Alliance (CTA) said in a statement that it “continues to work on several additional border barriers and areas where border policies remain misaligned with a coalition of trucking groups, including the American Trucking Associations (ATA), National Tank Truck Carriers and Truckload Carriers Association.”

The CTA and PMTC did not immediately respond to a request for additional comments from FreightWaves.

Over the past several months, the CTA, PMTC, ATA and other trucking associations have been calling on the Biden administration to end the vaccine requirements. The CTA said the mandate has barred thousands of unvaccinated truck drivers in Canada from entering the U.S. 

“The U.S. border restrictions mean that thousands of Canadian drivers are unable to support Canada-U.S. trade and goods movement,” Lak Shoan, director of CTA’s policy and industry awareness programs, told FreightWaves in February. “Taking a significant number of drivers out of the cross-border supply chain has led to tighter capacity and operational constraints for Canadian carriers.”

Watch: AI making an impact in cross-border trade.

videojs.getPlayer('1765333248391343387').ready(function() {
var myPlayer = this;
myPlayer.on("loadedmetadata", function() {
var browser_language, track_language, audioTracks;
browser_language = navigator.language || navigator.userLanguage; // IE <= 10
browser_language = browser_language.substr(0, 2);

audioTracks = myPlayer.audioTracks();
for (var i = 0; i < audioTracks.length; i++) {
track_language = audioTracks[i].language.substr(0, 2);
if (track_language) {
if (track_language === browser_language) {
audioTracks[i].enabled = true;
}
}
}
});
});

Click for more FreightWaves articles by Noi Mahoney.

More articles by Noi Mahoney

Borderlands: AI’s rising impact on cross-border trade focus of new report

Truck inspections causing long wait times at Texas border bridges

Cummins posts record Q1 revenue, raises full-year outlook

The post US lifting vaccine mandate at Canadian, Mexican borders appeared first on FreightWaves.

Source: freightwaves - US lifting vaccine mandate at Canadian, Mexican borders
Editor: Noi Mahoney

menu