Toronto Star

Manitoba border crossings still a sore point

Province wants extra money but can’t reach agreement with feds on refugee numbers

- STEVE LAMBERT

WINNIPEG— The Manitoba and federal government­s have been unable to resolve a dispute over refugee funding because they cannot agree on how many claimants walking across the border stay in the province.

The Progressiv­e Conservati­ve government asked for federal help in February to provide housing, education and other services for an influx of asylum-seekers entering the country near Emerson, Man. Education Minister Ian Wishart said there have been ongoing discussion­s, but no firm commitment­s.

“There’s been no specific commitment­s. They’re certainly willing to talk, which is a good sign,” Wishart said. “And we will work with them on that and try and find some solution.”

Welcome Place, a non-profit agency that has provided short-term shelter, paralegal services and other help to most of the recent arrivals, has also asked the federal government for money.

“They did ask us to submit a budget a couple of months ago, but we have not heard back from the federal government on where they are,” said Rita Chahal, the agency’s executive director.

A few hundred people have walked across open fields and through ditches into Manitoba 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 unofficial­ly instead of at border posts because of the Canada-U.S. Safe Third Country agreement. Under that 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 if they manage to get onto Canadian soil some other way.

Last month, federal Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale said “a great many” of the border-crossers were not staying in Manitoba, so the demand for social services might not be as high as some believe.

Goodale’s office was unable to provide statistics to back up his statement.

His office referred questions to the Department of Immigratio­n, Refugees and Citizenshi­p Canada, which did not provide statistics, but said many claimants from Manitoba were scheduling their hearings in other provinces.

“Based on where hearings with the Immigratio­n and Refugee Board are scheduled compared to where the asylum claim was made, we anticipate that the majority of asylum claimants are planning to relocate to larger urban centres, such as Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver,” department spokespers­on Nancy Chan wrote in an email.

Wishart said many of the refugee claimants at the start of the influx last year did not stay in Manitoba, but he estimated about 70 per cent of recent arrivals have.

The province’s Department of Families said it has processed 119 applicatio­ns for welfare benefits from refugee claimants since Jan. 1, some of which are for couples and families.

Alastair Clarke, an immigratio­n lawyer in Winnipeg, said most of the refugee claimants he represents are remaining in Manitoba.

“I stay in touch with my clients . . . because I help them with their permanent resident applicatio­ns and many, if not all, of my clients over the past six months have stayed in Manitoba,” he said.

Welcome Place launched a fundraisin­g campaign last month and has so far raised less than half of its $300,000 goal, Chahal said. The group is busy, but has been able to meet the needs of refugee claimants to date.

Welcome Place expects to see a steady stream this year of almost 100 people a month, Chahal said. The Manitoba government announced in February that it would pay for 14 new emergency housing units, $110,000 for paralegal and other services, and $70,000 for a coordinato­r to support refugee claimants.

A few hundred people have walked across open fields into Manitoba since Jan. 1

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