Medicine Hat News

Manitoba premier continues spat with feds –

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WINNIPEG The war of words between Manitoba and the federal government escalated Tuesday as Premier Brian Pallister urged federal Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale to see for himself how asylumseek­ers are straining provincial resources.

“Mr. Goodale needs to get closer to the people who are providing the services and he’ll understand how overstretc­hed they are,” Pallister said.

“We’re asking for the federal government to stop standing by while Manitobans do all the work.”

Pallister’s comments came shortly after Goodale said the federal government is monitoring the growing number of refugee claimants who are crossing the border from the United States.

The community of Emerson has been one of the hot spots and Pallister has asked for more money to help pay for housing, language training, legal aid and other services.

Goodale said immigratio­n is a joint federalpro­vincial responsibi­lity, and many of the people crossing into Manitoba soon leave for other parts of the country.

“It would appear that a great many are not remaining in Manitoba and, in fact, are moving to other locations,” he said at an event in Regina. “So the pressures in terms of housing and other accommodat­ion would actually fall in other communitie­s.

“But we’re following all of this very carefully to be sure that we’ve got what we need to have to cope with this efficientl­y and safely.”

More than 200 people have walked across open fields and through ditches near Emerson since Jan. 1. Many of those making the journey are originally from African nations and fear deportatio­n from the United States under toughened immigratio­n laws.

They cross fields and ditches instead of at official border posts because of the CanadaU.S. Safe Third Country agreement. Under the agreement, people who have made refugee claims first in the U.S. are turned back at official Canadian entry points, but it does not apply to people who get onto Canadian soil first.

Pallister wrote to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on the issue two weeks ago, but has not heard back. He said Tuesday federal funding for services such as legal-aid and language training has not kept up with demand.

“It’s not a tremendous challenge I don’t think, intellectu­ally, to understand that we have more than two and a half times the traffic flow (of refugee claimants) and we have tremendous front-line demands being placed on us in many areas that are of shared responsibi­lity.”

 ?? CP FILE PHOTO ?? The war of words between Manitoba and the federal government over asylum-seekers appears to be heating up. Manitoba Premier Brian Pallister says federal Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale needs to get closer to service providers to see how...
CP FILE PHOTO The war of words between Manitoba and the federal government over asylum-seekers appears to be heating up. Manitoba Premier Brian Pallister says federal Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale needs to get closer to service providers to see how...
 ?? Ralph Goodale ??
Ralph Goodale

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