Medicine Hat News

Canadian border agents being sent to Quebec

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OTTAWA Border security officers are being diverted from across Canada to help with an anticipate­d spike in the number of asylum seekers crossing irregularl­y into Quebec.

The Canada Border Services Agency has sent memos across the country advising that agents from other regions will be in Quebec May 28-Sept. 16 to help deal with the influx of refugee claimants crossing the Canada-U.S. border at unofficial entry points.

The measure could mean staff shortages causing delays at major airports like Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver, as well as land ports like Windsor and Niagara Falls, said Jean-Pierre Fortin, national president of the Customs and Immigratio­n Union.

Security issues could also be an issue, Fortin warned.

“The impact will be that there may be enough resources at Lacolle (Quebec), but they will create other points of pressure across Canada,” he said.

“The end result will be that wait times will increase and security will go down.”

The influx of refugee claimants has been an ongoing pressure point in Quebec for the last few months, with more people coming across non-official entry points along the border: the RCMP intercepte­d 7,612 refugee claimants between January and April of this year.

Officials are preparing for a spike over the warm summer months. The government is setting up temporary housing units at Saint-Bernard-de-Lacolle, the municipali­ty where the majority of RCMP intercepti­ons of irregular migrants in Quebec take place.

The short-term accommodat­ions are meant to ease pressure on Quebec’s resources while plans are still being developed to “triage” incoming asylum seekers in the hopes of diverting those who may be willing to settle in areas outside Montreal.

But while the pressure remains significan­t in Quebec, diverting border security officers from other areas of the country will create new pressure points at official ports of entry, especially during the summer, Fortin predicted.

“You have to keep in mind that the summer period is our busiest time for our officers. People are going to the United States, Americans are coming to Canada, it’s the vacation period so obviously that’s a time we are extremely busy.”

Fortin wants the government to hire more staff to deal with the problems, not re-deploy existing officers. The union argues it has been losing officers to attrition over the last year, and that only half of those who have left have been replaced.

Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale told reporters in Saskatoon Thursday

The memo to employees was a routine one sent every year to see if some employees would be willing to be assigned to another location or work overtime during the busy summer months, Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale said Thursday.

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