The Niagara Falls Review

Goodale to address border ‘tensions’

Public safety minister to meet with U.S. homeland secretary

- JIM BRONSKILL

OTTAWA — Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale says he will soon talk face-to-face with his U.S. counterpar­t about the difficulti­es some Canadians are experienci­ng at the border.

Goodale said Tuesday he will have a chance in coming weeks — no date has been set — to discuss any border “issues or tensions” with Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly.

“We’re working on the scheduling of that,” Goodale said after a cabinet meeting. “The atmosphere in terms of the preliminar­y relationsh­ip seems to be very, very good.”

The Nexus trusted-traveller cards of about 200 Canadian permanent residents were cancelled after U.S. President Donald Trump issued an executive immigratio­n order banning visitors from seven largely Muslim countries.

There have been several recent reports about minorities being turned away at the U.S. border. At the same time, Manitoba is grappling with an influx of would-be refugees crossing at remote border points in bitterly cold weather.

Goodale was briefed on the refugee issue Tuesday by RCMP Commission­er Bob Paulson and Canada Border Services Agency president John Ossowski.

“They’re redeployin­g resources to make sure that they’ve got the right people at the right place to be able to cope with these matters,” Goodale said.

The border issues have threatened to overshadow progress Canada made this week in Washington on plans for cargo preclearan­ce to speed up trade as well as more extensive co-operation on fending off cyberthrea­ts.

Goodale was among the ministers who accompanie­d Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on his first visit with Trump.

Canada and the U.S. agreed to move ahead with preclearan­ce of cargo, which allows for the examinatio­n of shipments by the destinatio­n country at special sites inside the territory of the departure country. The idea is to benefit travellers and trade by reducing congestion and delays at the border.

Goodale hailed the language in a joint Canada-U.S. statement as a “major step forward.”

“It didn’t say we were going to study it, we were going to think about it, we’re going to work on it — it says from both countries, we are committed to implement it,” he said. “There are some preliminar­y sites that have been examined for some pilots where we can work out the kinks and the logistics.”

The efforts would build on cargo pilot projects the countries have already carried out under the 2011 Beyond the Border security pact.

“I think, from my impression (in Washington), the Americans are as keen as we are to make cargo preclearan­ce a reality,” Goodale said.

Currently, people flying to American cities through eight major Canadian airports can be precleared there by U.S. Customs and Border Protection officers.

Passenger preclearan­ce is being expanded to Billy Bishop Toronto City Airport and Quebec City’s Jean Lesage Internatio­nal Airport, as well as for rail service in Montreal and Vancouver.

On Monday, Canada and the U.S. agreed to bring traveller preclearan­ce to other locations, though one insider said it was too early to say which ones might participat­e.

The commitment to collaborat­e more closely on cyberthrea­ts and protecting important systems also builds on existing cross-border efforts.

“We have a number of common critical infrastruc­ture systems that cross the border between our two countries,” Goodale said Tuesday. “The North American power grid is a good example of that, where there are huge interconne­ctions along the border. And we want to make that as resilient and resistant to attack as we possibly can.”

 ?? JUSTIN TANG/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale speaks to reporters as he arrives for a cabinet meeting on Parliament Hill, in Ottawa on Tuesday.
JUSTIN TANG/THE CANADIAN PRESS Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale speaks to reporters as he arrives for a cabinet meeting on Parliament Hill, in Ottawa on Tuesday.

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