Toronto Star

Americans blocked at border up 31%

Border services agency refuses to reveal reasons for rise in refusals in 2016

- MAXIME BERGERON LA PRESSE

OTTAWA— While many Canadians are concerned about having problems at the U.S. border, it is Americans who are having difficulti­es visiting Canada, with the number turned away rising by 31 per cent last year, La Presse has learned.

According to federal documents, 30,233 Americans were turned away when attempting to enter Canada in 2016. In 2015, 23,052 people were turned back, representi­ng an increase of 31 per cent in one year.

The numbers are all the more striking when compared to 2014, when just 7,509 American citizens were refused entry to Canada.

The Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA), which is responsibl­e for border security, would not provide reasons for the increase.

“The CBSA is not in a position to speculate,” said Nicholas Dorion, a spokespers­on for the agency. “The number of people turned away at the border fluctuates from year to year.”

The announceme­nt of a new intelligen­ce-sharing agreement between Ottawa and Washington in 2013 likely played a role, according to Tamara Mosher Kuczer, a lawyer specializi­ng in immigratio­n matters with the law office Capelle Kane in Ottawa. Under the deal, Canadian border agents can more easily detect Americans with a criminal record who show up at the border. Infraction­s, some decades old, could not be detected before the deal. “We receive many more demands from people who travelled for years to Canada without a problem and who are now refused entry for a drinking and driving infraction­s that dates back 40 years,” the lawyer said.

The CBSA refused to detail the reasons for the 30,233 refusals of American travellers last year. People turned back at the border generally receive “permission to leave,” the federal agency said.

“If an individual is suspected of being prohibited from Canadian territory by a Canadian border agent for a reason cited by the Immigratio­n and Refugee Act, the agent must always consider authorizin­g the person to leave Canada voluntaril­y,” Dorion said.

“When the agent at the border authorizes a person to take back their request to enter Canada, they have to proceed by providing a formula entitled ‘authorized to leave Canada’ ”

It is the ‘authorized to leave Canada’ documents that La Presse was able to consult under the Access to Informatio­n Act. Since the election of U.S. President Donald Trump, Canadians are less frequently turned away at the U.S. border.

According to The Canadian Press, the number of Canadians refused entry at American land crossings dropped by 8.5 per cent over the past five months. That means that 6,875 Canadians could not get across the border between October 2016 and February 2017, compared to 7,619 in the same period a year earlier.

But those statistics haven’t stopped some Canadians from thinking twice about attempting to cross the border.

The Toronto District School Board, which represents 245,000 students, suspended school trips to the United States. Board officials blamed Trump’s controvers­ial travel restric- tions, which ban would-be visitors and immigrants to the U.S. from Iran, Syria, Somalia, Sudan, Yemen and Libya.

“We strongly believe that our students should not be placed into these situations of potentiall­y being turned away at the border,” TDSB education director John Malloy told the Star’s Andrea Gordon last week.

Trump’s ban is being challenged by several U.S. states.

Mexico accounted for the largest number of people refused entry to Canada after the United States (2,729 people in 2016), followed by China (1,783), India (1,470), Colombia (912), Ecuador (647), Saudi Arabia (563) and France (561).

As for Syrians, who have been in the spotlight for several months, only 77 of them were refused access to Canada last year, as well as 15 since the start of 2017. With files from William Leclerc, La Presse

“The number of people turned away at the border fluctuates from year to year.” NICHOLAS DORION CBSA SPOKESPERS­ON

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