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COVID-19 travel advisories create tensions in B.C. tourism towns | CBC News

Byindianadmin

Jun 7, 2020
COVID-19 travel advisories create tensions in B.C. tourism towns | CBC News

Tourist communities in the B.C. Interior are appealing for calm after at least five vehicles bearing Alberta plates were allegedly vandalized, left with nasty notes the drivers were aggressively confronted, telling them to go home.

Matt Graham found this note on his Alberta-plated car last month in Revelstoke, B.C., and soon after noticed a large scratch on the side. (Submitted by Matt Graham)

Tourism-reliant communities in the B.C. Interior are appealing for calm after at least five vehicles bearing Alberta plates were allegedly vandalized, left with nasty notes or the drivers were aggressively confronted and told to go home. 

The incidents come as B.C. public health officials continue to urge people not to travel unless it’s essential.

Last month in Revelstoke, Matt Graham found a note on his windshield, telling him to “F-ck off back to Alberta! Supposed to be not doing non-essential travel.” Soon after, he also noticed a large scratch on the side of his car. 

“That is when I put two and two together — the keying and the note,” he said. 

“It’s the plates, right?” 

Graham, who was born in B.C. but spent more than a decade living in Alberta, moved back at the beginning of May after taking a job at a cannabis company.

At the time, he still had an Alberta plate on his vehicle.

Jennifer Bowen, who moved to Vancouver Island at the end of May, left this note on her dashboard asking people not to slash her tires because of her Alberta plates. (Submitted by Jennifer Bowen)

Albertans concerned

In other B.C. communities, drivers have found similar notes on their Alberta-plated cars.

Janean James told CBC News through a Facebook message that when she returned to her car after parking in Cranbrook last month, one of her tires was cut and a “disturbing” note was left behind.

Some Albertans have tried to be proactive. Jennifer Bowen, who moved to Vancouver Island at the end of May, tells CBC New she left a note on her dashboard asking people not to slash her tires because of her Alberta plates.

Police said that in April, a man in Columbia Valley spat at a vehicle with an Alberta plate. On May 18, a man in Trail verbally confronted a woman with an Alberta licence plate, according to the RCMP.

While it appears there have only been a few incidents where vehicles have been targeted, the hostile reception is at odds with the fact that the economies of many communities in the region are buoyed by inter-provincial visitors and seasona

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