Waterloo Region Record

Refugee camp

Tories attack plan for temporary housing at Quebec border crossing

- RAISA PATEL AND MIKE BLANCHFIEL­D The Canadian Press

OTTAWA — The federal government is planning to build temporary housing for up to 520 people at a Quebec border crossing that has seen an influx of asylum seekers.

The move comes as tens of thousands of Hondurans lost temporary protected immigratio­n status in the U.S. There are concerns some of them they may look northward for refuge.

Public Works and the Canada Border Services Agency say in a notice that the housing units are for Saint-Bernard-de-Lacolle — the municipali­ty where the majority of RCMP intercepti­ons of irregular migrants in Quebec take place.

The Opposition says the Liberal government is effectivel­y setting up a refugee camp at the Canada-U.S. border.

“I’m not sure any Canadian would think that this is an acceptable response,” Conservati­ve immigratio­n critic Michelle Rempel said Friday.

Rempel said there is a frustratin­g lack of informatio­n from the government about the makeup and needs of asylum seekers:

“How can I say how much money they should be needing when we don’t even know what their needs are? And that is the result of having no plan for immigratio­n. It’s bananas.”

In a statement, Minister of Public Safety Ralph Goodale called Rempel’s reference to a refugee camp “misleading,” adding that “most irregular crossers do not spend long in custody before being released.”

The housing notice currently calls for “heated, ventilated and illuminate­d canvas shelters” for three-season use that must include areas for sleeping, security, reception and warehousin­g. The government is also looking for other units to serve as quarantine space, toilets and showers as well as systems for drinking water and drainage.

Goodale that the short-term accommodat­ions would be installed to ease pressures on Quebec’s resources while making sure Canada follows its internatio­nal obligation­s. The majority of irregular crossings currently take place in the province.

“These tents are part of the government of Canada’s contingenc­y planning,” Goodale said. “While they cannot predict what volumes will come next, we are prepared to manage an increase in asylum seekers in an orderly way.”

Dozens of tents were set up at the Lacolle crossing in August of last year, many of which were dismantled when numbers of border crossers slowed. But Goodale says the structures that remain are not enough to meet the demand.

“There is currently limited bed capacity on-site, which is hard for children if they need to remain more than a day.”

The minister also noted that while the crossing typically processes asylum claimants within a day, a large influx could spell longer processing times. Immigratio­n, Refugees and Citizenshi­p Canada equipped the official port of entry with a mobile processing unit last fall to help speed up intake.

About 2,500 asylum seekers crossed into Canada from the U.S. in April, Mike MacDonald, a senior Immigratio­n Department official, told the House of Commons immigratio­n committee on Thursday.

MacDonald said the figure was just an estimate and that the exact number for April would be known “in the fullness of time.”

Rempel said it wasn’t good enough that federal officials came to testify without having an exact number. “That’s not fair,” she said. “This is of immediate concern.”

On Friday, the U.S. ended a program granting temporary protected status for Hondurans in the U.S. A similar revocation of status for Haitians and El Salvadoran­s is blamed for triggering last year’s influx of border crossers. The decision gives more than 57,000 Hondurans with temporary protected status a year and a half to leave the U.S. or obtain legal residency in other ways.

 ?? JOHNNY MILANO NYT ?? Samuel Contreras, a housing contractor and immigratio­n rights activist in Long Island, N.Y, is one of tens of thousands of Hondurans who were allowed to live in the U.S. after hurricane Mitch ravaged their country.
JOHNNY MILANO NYT Samuel Contreras, a housing contractor and immigratio­n rights activist in Long Island, N.Y, is one of tens of thousands of Hondurans who were allowed to live in the U.S. after hurricane Mitch ravaged their country.

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