The Province

Ottawa slows the flow of asylum seekers to Cornwall

- ALAN S. HALE

CORNWALL, Ont. — The federal government has informed the City of Cornwall that they’re not sending any more asylum seekers to Nav Centre — at least for the time being.

With no more new people being sent to Cornwall, the government expects all the asylum seekers who are already staying at the Nav Centre will have their applicatio­ns processed and be moved to more longterm housing in the Montreal area by the end of this week.

Cornwall Mayor Leslie O’Shaughness­y confirmed this was the message given to the municipali­ty on Friday when they met with the various government agencies running the temporary housing program.

“The latest indication from Friday’s briefing indicates that the asylum seekers that are presently at the Nav Centre will be processed this week, and they feel that all of them will be processed and moved to Montreal and, at this point in time, there are no more scheduled transfers to the City of Cornwall,” said the mayor.

That doesn’t mean that there won’t be any more asylums seekers coming, cautioned O’Shaughness­y, only that there are no plans to send any more at the moment. For this reason, the tent city which was erected behind the Nav Centre by the Canadian Armed Forces will remain in place.

The tents were set up shortly after the asylum seekers began arriving almost two weeks ago in case the Nav Centre building ran out of room to house them. That did not happen, and the tent city has been completely unused so far.

But according to O’Shaughness­y, the federal government intends to keep the tents up and the small maintenanc­e force of soldiers in place at least until October, just in case it’s still needed.

The reason given to the municipali­ty for why the government is not sending any more asylum seekers to Cornwall is because the housing facility in Lacolle, Que. has been able to accommodat­e all of the new people crossing the border.

The mayor didn’t know for certain this meant that crossing at the Canada/U.S. border in Lacolle had fallen to manageable levels, but Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale indicated last week the number of crossings was declining on a daily basis.

“All we know is that the backlog has been cleared and all the asylum seekers are being handled in Montreal,” said O’Shaughness­y “But that could change in the future.”

 ?? — THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? The tent city that was erected behind the Nav Centre in Cornwall, Ont., by the Canadian Armed Forces will stay in place at least until October, just in case it’s needed.
— THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES The tent city that was erected behind the Nav Centre in Cornwall, Ont., by the Canadian Armed Forces will stay in place at least until October, just in case it’s needed.

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