Canada Gave Out $17,000 In Fines To 2 Travellers Who Lied About COVID-19

The two people boarded a flight to Canada knowing they tested positive.
Senior Writer

As a result of Canada's air travel restrictions, the government has issued $17,000 worth of fines to two people who flew into the country.

Transport Canada announced that the passengers were given fines after an investigation found that they both presented falsified test results.

Editor's Choice: Prince Harry & Meghan Markle Are Officially Leaving The Royal Family As 'Working Members'

One person was fined $10,000 and the other, $7,000 for the misleading results and for making a false declaration about their health.

Both of those people boarded a flight to Canada from Mexico on January 23.

They did that while knowing that they tested positive for COVID-19 just a few days before their flight took off.

Under the interim order that has put restrictions in place for air travel, passengers are not only required to show proof of a negative test but are also prohibited from knowingly providing false or misleading results.

As of February 22, travellers arriving in Canada by both air and by land have to take a COVID-19 test upon arrival as well.

Only people who come by plane have to do the mandated hotel quarantine while waiting for the results.

  • Senior Writer

    Lisa Belmonte (she/her) is a Senior Writer with Narcity Media. After graduating with a Bachelor of Journalism from Toronto Metropolitan University (formerly Ryerson University), she joined the Narcity team. Lisa covers news and notices from across the country from a Canada-wide perspective. Her early coverage of the COVID-19 pandemic earned Narcity its first-ever national journalism award nomination.

Air traffic control audio reveals what went wrong in the deadly Air Canada plane crash

"I messed up," the air traffic controller can be heard saying after the crash.

A key warning system failed before the deadly Air Canada plane crash, US officials say

The U.S. safety board says the runway warning system didn't sound an alarm before Sunday's crash at LaGuardia Airport.

4 skiers were killed in separate BC avalanches over the weekend

Multiple avalanches on Sunday claimed the lives of four skiers in northern B.C.

This province just promised to end provincial tax on all food from grocery stores

Currently, "convenience" foods — like snacks, sodas and prepared meals — are taxed everywhere in Canada.

Everything we know so far about the fatal Air Canada plane crash at LaGuardia Airport

From air traffic control transcripts to chilling passenger accounts, here's all the info we have so far.

If you're a single Vancouver guy still struggling on dates — read this

And no, my advice is not a quick trip to Turkey with the boys.

Mark Carney called out Air Canada CEO's English-only condolences after deadly plane crash

The CEO is being summoned to testify after Canada's official language commissioner received over 80 complaints about the video.