Times Colonist

Feds eye heated trailers for asylum-seekers

- JOANNA SMITH

OTTAWA — The federal government is thinking about buying trailers to keep asylum-seekers currently living in tents at the U.S. border safe from the cold winter.

“These tents do have heaters, but we also have a very, very cold winter in this country and so we are, as a precaution­ary measure, looking at the possibilit­y of trailers,” Transport Minister Marc Garneau said Friday after meeting the federal-provincial task force charged with managing an unpreceden­ted flow of asylumseek­ers.

“We’re just doing our homework so that we are, if necessary, prepared for things that could develop over the coming months.”

More than 6,000 people have crossed illegally into Quebec from New York since July, the vast majority of them Haitians.

Many are staying in tents at the border in Saint-Bernard-de-Lacolle, Que., as they await processing, but the federal government has issued a tender notice seeking suppliers who would be able to provide winterized trailers — on six weeks’ notice — to accommodat­e 200 people.

Garneau, chair of the ad hoc intergover­nmental task force on irregular migration, said the government is increasing resources aimed to spur the processing, including opening an additional facility in Montreal and looking into ways to help claimants get temporary work permits faster.

“We know, from our experience, people want to work, are able to work,” said Quebec Immigratio­n Minister Kathleen Weil.

Many of the asylum-seekers are believed to be coming to Canada because the U.S. government announced that it is thinking about lifting the temporary protected status given to Haitian nationals after that country’s deadly 2010 earthquake, meaning thousands of people could be deported.

The Haitians are not the only group dealing with that change in policy, as there is no guarantee the U.S. will renew temporary protected status for citizens from nine other countries that is also set to expire in the coming months.

So, the federal government is also expanding its outreach efforts in the U.S. beyond the Haitian community to drive home the message that asylum in Canada is not a sure bet.

“You have to be able to demonstrat­e that you are in fear of returning to your country of origin, that you are fleeing persecutio­n, war or terror,” said Garneau.

Liberal MP Emmanuel Dubourg recently went to Miami to spread this message through the Haitian diaspora there. Garneau said the message will be extended into other communitie­s in the U.S. A senior government source who spoke on the condition of anonymity said details of that effort are in the works, but people originally from El Salvador and Honduras are expected to be among those targeted.

Many of the Haitians who decided to cross the border were also motivated by false informatio­n circulatin­g on social media that Canada would give them special status because of their temporary protected position in the U.S.

 ?? GRAHAM HUGHES, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Asylum-seekers line up to receive boxed lunches in Hemmingfor­d, Que., after crossing the border from New York state last month.
GRAHAM HUGHES, THE CANADIAN PRESS Asylum-seekers line up to receive boxed lunches in Hemmingfor­d, Que., after crossing the border from New York state last month.

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