grantclaire
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Sep 23, 2007
- Messages
- 1,145
Hi everyone! Its been a long time since we have flown out of Terminal 1 at Pearson and we are flying AC in Dec to Orlando. Do you clear US customs in Toronto? Thanks
Have you ever noticed them not enforcing that rule when trying to clear Canadian Customs at YYZ, because once again they have lines for both Canadians ans Americans.I've almost never seen them actually enforce the US/everyone else thing - they just tell you to take the shortest line (and ignore the signs). This is both when it is super busy and when it is a ghost town. Actually, I don't thing I've EVER seen it enforced (which isn't the same as saying it is never enforced).
Have you ever noticed them not enforcing that rule when trying to clear Canadian Customs at YYZ, because once again they have lines for both Canadians ans Americans.
Well I have seen seperate lines for Canadians and Americans when clearing Canadian Customs, in both Terminal 1 and Terminal 3.No they don't.
Why in the world would CANADIAN immigration (not CUSTOMS) have a separate line for Americans? It doesn't even make any sense.
The only special lines at Canadian immigrations at YYZ T1 are for crew, special needs, diplomatic passports, and Nexus.
Well maybe they stopped doing that which is why you have not heard of it, however I am just reporting what I remember seeing.I might be able to believe that you've seen "Canadian" and "Everyone else" (thought not at YYZ T1). I never seen it at any Canadian airport though.
I find it impossible to believe that you've seen "Canadian" and "American", where would everyone else go? The Brits, Australians, Germans, Kenyans...
Well maybe they stopped doing that which is why you have not heard of it, however I am just reporting what I remember seeing.
Well when I did see it I thought to myself it does make no sense to have it.I've been flying regularly for well over a decade and I've never seen it.
Can you at least acknowledge that having "American" and "Canadian" makes no sense? And leaves a whole lot of people without a line to stand in?
I've been flying regularly for well over a decade and I've never seen it.
Can you at least acknowledge that having "American" and "Canadian" makes no sense? And leaves a whole lot of people without a line to stand in?
Flying INTO Canada there are lines for Canadian residents, visitors to Canada, and diplomatic members/flight crew/special needs, and Nexus lines.
Generally entering INTO a country there may be lines for residents and non-residents, but even then not all lines are open/staffed during low demand periods. Yesterday at FRA for instance the 'others' lines were not staffed so everyone just moved into the 'EU/ER/CH residents' line with us.
As a kid, I used to get very annoyed since I never got to the "special" line up. I didn't qualify for it in the US or Europe, and Canada (at least the airports/terminals I went through) never had one. I felt very hard done by.
Well, I suppose that I felt 'unspecial' because all the non EU/CH ppl were in our special line yesterday, clogging things up. AND I was asked some very bizarre questions. They never ask me questions when I am an EU passport holder in my own country - darned unspecial people were messing things up I think!![]()
We dirty, smelly foreigners messed it all up
For those who don't read the transportation board, "dirty, smelly foreigner" is a term of endearment. Or, at least, a term often used and not meant to insult Bavaria (or those in "her" line).
Er, isn't this the 'Canadian' board, located in the 'Global Neighbours' section? Doesn't that by default make the vast majority of people reading what you posted 'dirty smelly foreigners' by default too?!![]()
The US preclearance line at YYZ can be very, very long or very, very short.
I've had trips where there was literally no line (and many open agents), so it basically as long it took to walk to the agent and times where the line reached out the door and behind the ticket counters.
I've almost never seen them actually enforce the US/everyone else thing - they just tell you to take the shortest line (and ignore the signs). This is both when it is super busy and when it is a ghost town. Actually, I don't thing I've EVER seen it enforced (which isn't the same as saying it is never enforced).
How early is "early am"? And what day of the week? There are some patterns (though they do not always hold true).