The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Seeking answers

Cornwall officials frustrated at lack of informatio­n on Haitian asylum seekers

- BY MIKE BLANCHFIEL­D

Municipal politician­s in this eastern Ontario community said Monday they were frustrated at the paucity of informatio­n from the federal government over an influx of Haitian asylum seekers crossing to Canada from the United States.

“There are mixed feelings in our community on what we think they should be doing and shouldn’t be doing,” said Cornwall Mayor Leslie O’Shaughness­y at a special meeting Monday evening to give municipal leaders an update on the arrival of hundreds of Haitian refugees the federal government has decided to send to their town.

About three dozen local residents overflowed the tiny Cornwall council chamber to hear an update from officials from the Immigratio­n Department and the Canada Border Services Agency, as well as their own local representa­tives.

O’Shaughness­y appeared less than enthusiast­ic by the answers from the senior federal officials from the department­s, and called on them to return to Cornwall to answer questions from the public directly.

“We do not want to create a situation where we are dividing, having divisions within our community,” the mayor said, adding the way to avoid that was “to provide proper and clear informatio­n to them in a timely manner.”

Bradley Nuttley, the municipali­ty’s emergency response chief, described how the Canadian Forces was building “a tent city for lack of a better word” on the corner of a lawn of a tiny, privately run conference centre. It is to provide temporary accommodat­ion for 500 people for the coming months while they wait for their asylum claims to be processed.

“Can you image the noise that’s going to come out of there?” John Thomson, 70, who lives near the tents, said after the meetings.

“This was a lousy meeting with no questions.”

However, about a dozen others in the public gallery applauded when Coun. Elaine MacDonald said she hoped some of the migrants stay in Cornwall and abandon their aspiration­s to move to Montreal.

Jules Bourdon, 73, said Haitians could offer Cornwall the chance to boost the number of French-language speakers, which he said is only at about 20 per cent.

“I’m not against new immigrants coming to the region, and I hope we can integrate them here.”

Const. Daniel Cloutier, a Cornwall police spokesman, said almost 300 Haitians have arrived recently and, so far, there have been no problems and none are anticipate­d.

About 3,800 people crossed into Quebec in the first two weeks of August following the 2,996 who crossed in July after the Trump administra­tion said it may end “temporary protected status” for Haitians in the U.S. following their country’s massive 2010 earthquake.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? People relax on the grounds of Cornwall’s Nav Centre, which is temporaril­y housing U.S. asylum seekers, Monday.
CP PHOTO People relax on the grounds of Cornwall’s Nav Centre, which is temporaril­y housing U.S. asylum seekers, Monday.

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