The Hamilton Spectator

Report calls for panel to review border agency

Ottawa seeks ‘appropriat­e mechanism’ to review officer conduct and handle complaints

- JIM BRONSKILL

OTTAWA — The Trudeau government should create a new watchdog to handle public complaints about the Canada Border Services Agency, says a federally commission­ed report.

The report, prepared for Public Safety Canada, also recommends the proposed body be able to look into trends and any systemic problems at the border services agency.

The new watchdog, the Canada Law Enforcemen­t Review Commission, would scrutinize both the border agency and the RCMP, given the frequent overlap between the two enforcemen­t organizati­ons.

The June 2017 report by former Privy Council Office chief Mel Cappe, now a professor at the University of Toronto, was obtained by The Canadian Press through the Access to Informatio­n Act.

Scott Bardsley, a spokespers­on for Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale, would not comment directly on Cappe’s recommenda­tions, but said the government is working on legislatio­n to create an “appropriat­e mechanism” to review border services agency officer conduct and handle complaints.

“The government is committed to ensuring that our border services are world class and worthy of the trust of Canadians.”

The border agency’s thousands of employees manage the flow of about 100 million travellers — as well as some 16 million commercial shipments — entering Canada annually.

They collect, analyze and distribute informatio­n concerning people and goods at border points, air terminals and seaports.

Border officers can stop travellers for questionin­g, take blood and breath samples, and search, detain and arrest citizens and non-citizens without a warrant.

The border agency faces tough questions about its role in immigratio­n detention following in-custody deaths.

The agency’s internal recourse directorat­e handles complaints from the public, and other bodies including the courts, the federal privacy commission­er and the Canadian Internatio­nal Trade Tribunal examine various concerns about the agency’s work.

But the border agency is not overseen by a dedicated, independen­t review or complaints body.

Civil libertaria­ns, refugee lawyers and committees of both the House of Commons and Senate have called in recent years for stronger arm’s-length monitoring.

The Liberals have taken steps to keep closer tabs on the border agency’s national security activities by creating a special committee of parliament­arians to review federal security services and proposing a super-watchdog of civilian experts to complement that work.

The body Cappe proposes would fill remaining gaps by providing independen­t scrutiny of the border agency’s law-enforcemen­t activities and addressing complaints.

The new watchdog could look at everything from a shipper’s concern about foot-dragging on a customs decision to the treatment of mentally ill immigrants.

Cappe notes that in 2015 there were fewer than 2,400 complaints about border officer actions from travellers.

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