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The COVID-19 pandemic has created regional tourism hotspots as big cities suffer

Authors: Juste Rajaonson, Professor of Urban Studies and Sustainability, Universite du Quebec a Montreal (UQAM) and Georges A. Tanguay, Professor of Urban Studies and Economics, Universite du Quebec a Montreal (UQAM) International travel restrictions during the COVID-19 pandemic have prompted many travel enthusiasts to explore local and regional tourist destinations. However, communities have been affected very differently from increased numbers of homegrown tourists. In Canada, the impact on international travel due to COVID-19 was immediate, with a decrease of 614,000 international arrivals to Canada in March 2020. That represented a 92-per-cent decrease over 2019 a loss that has not yet been recovered. At the same time, travel restrictions played a role in shifting up to 20 million holiday and leisure trips abroad by Canadian residents to domestic destinations. Boosting domestic travel has been at the heart of federal and provincial government strategies to limit losses

The COVID-19 pandemic has created regional tourism hotspots as big cities suffer

International travel restrictions during the COVID-19 pandemic have prompted many travel enthusiasts to explore local and regional tourist destinations. However, communities have been affected very differently from increased numbers of homegrown tourists. In Canada, the impact on international travel due to COVID-19 was immediate, with a decrease of 614,000 international arrivals to Canada in March 2020. That represented a 92-per-cent decrease over 2019 a loss that has not yet been recovered. Monthly international tourist arrivals in 2019 and 2020. Authors’ calculations based on Statistics Canada data At the same time, travel restrictions played a role in shifting up to 20 million holiday and leisure trips abroad by Canadian residents to domestic destinations. Boosting domestic travel has been at the heart of federaland provincial government strategies to limit losses in the tourism sector.

Councillors grapple with river access parking woes

Author of the article: Vincent Ball Publishing date: Apr 20, 2021  •  2 hours ago  •  2 minute read  •  Article content More work is needed to come up with the right solution for tourist-related parking problems in Glen Morris and Paris, Brant County councillors say. Councillors, at an administration and operations committee Tuesday, decided to defer for one month a decision on how to solve parking woes at three locations: the Eric Tomlinson River Access Point in Glen Morris; Penman’s Dam and Bean Park in Paris. “It’s a circus down there, ” Mayor David Bailey said of the situation in Glen Morris. “If it was just about the parking there are things we can do.

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