I've always felt that we need to, first and foremost, consider this pandemic to be a global pandemic, so we need to appreciate that Canadians won't be fully safe until everyone around the world is going to be safe. If we think of Canada and its borders, and everything within its borders, you have really two choices.
One is that you allow provinces to make their own decisions, but you protect the provinces from the strengths and weaknesses of the adjacent provinces where people travel to and from. At the moment, if you're bordering Manitoba, which has a pretty high case rate at present, and you're allowing travel from your province to and from Manitoba, then you are adopting much of the risk of the other province. I think it's really important that we not only consider international travel, but we consider interprovincial and regional travel in how we open up our economies and, more importantly, how we move forward.
It is important that we move forward, especially as we become more successful within Canada with meeting vaccination targets, but we have to be very aware that the threat won't go away until the threat internationally goes away.