Times Colonist

Residents near border to be paid for asylum-seeker disruption­s

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OTTAWA — Quebecers living by the CanadaUnit­ed States border where thousands of migrants have crossed irregularl­y into the country since 2017 will be eligible for payments of up to $25,000, the federal government announced on Wednesday.

Life along the Roxham Road — the main entry point for migrants entering the country on foot — has been disturbed, and residents deserve to be compensate­d, Border Security Minister Bill Blair said.

“I’ve been there. I’ve spoken to the residents. I’ve seen the level of activity of the RCMP, the [Canada Border Services Agency] and other officials that has impacted what is otherwise a quiet, rural road,” Blair told reporters.

About 96 per cent of all migrants who have crossed illegally into Canada since 2017 have done so at Roxham Road.

The federal Immigratio­n Department says 16,000 people crossed the Canada-U.S. border illegally into Quebec through the end of October this year, and about 19,000 did last year.

Bureaucrat­s divided the Roxham Road area into three zones based on proximity to the border. People living in the closest zone are eligible to receive up to $25,000, those in the next closest $10,000, and those in the third zone $2,500.

A spokespers­on for Blair could not say on Wednesday how much the compensati­on will cost Ottawa.

Conservati­ve party Leader Andrew Scheer said in the House of Commons he worries irregular crossings will become a permanent problem.

“The prime minister needs to stop asking others to pay for his failures,” Scheer said.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau responded by stating Ottawa is investing $173 million to improve border security as well as to decrease the time it takes to process asylum seekers’ claims.

 ??  ?? A family from Haiti is seen approachin­g an RCMP tent in Saint-Bernard-de-Lacolle, Que., as they haul luggage from Champlain, New York, in August 2017. Quebecers living by the Canada-U.S. border where thousands of migrants have been crossing into the country since 2017 will be eligible for up to $25,000 from the federal government.
A family from Haiti is seen approachin­g an RCMP tent in Saint-Bernard-de-Lacolle, Que., as they haul luggage from Champlain, New York, in August 2017. Quebecers living by the Canada-U.S. border where thousands of migrants have been crossing into the country since 2017 will be eligible for up to $25,000 from the federal government.

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