Austin American-Statesman

Illegal crossings up at US-Canada border

- Jill Terreri Ramos

An increase in migrants crossing into the United States from the southern border has attracted many headlines, but there has also been an increase in crossings at the U.S.-Canada border.

Rep. Elise Stefanik, a New York Republican who represents a geographic­ally large district in the North Country and Adirondack Park, said on Fox News that the number of illegal crossings is many times higher than it has been in the past.

“We’ve seen an 800% increase in the Swanton sector, which is the part of the northern border that I represent, in illegal crossings,” Stefanik said on “Sunday Morning Futures with Maria Bartiromo” on Jan. 28.

The Swanton sector includes an estimated 24,000 square miles and includes northeaste­rn counties in New York, three counties in New Hampshire, and all of Vermont. It is responsibl­e for 295 miles of the U.S.-Canada border, over land and water.

Year-over-year increases in illegal crossings have been steady since the fiscal year that began Oct. 1, 2020, rising from just 365 that year to 1,065 in the next fiscal year, which ended in September 2022. In fiscal 2023, the number of people encountere­d at the border jumped to 6,925, representi­ng the largest year-over-year increase so far.

However, if current trends continue, 2024 will outpace the jump in 2023. In the first three months of fiscal 2024, there have been 2,607 crossings, compared with 1,147 during the same period last year.

Within this data, there are different time periods in which to calculate the increase, all yielding different results.

Stefanik could have seen a U.S. Customs and Border Protection news release from February 2023, which stated that there had been an approximat­e 846% increase in encounters and apprehensi­ons between Oct. 1, 2022, and Jan. 31, 2023, compared to the same period in fiscal year 2022.

In November, U.S. Customs and Border Protection Chief Patrol Agent Robert N. Garcia of the Swanton sector posted on X, formerly Twitter, that there had been a 550% increase in apprehensi­ons between fiscal 2022 and 2023, and that the migrants came from 79 countries. Garcia posted in August that apprehensi­ons in just over 10 months exceeded the previous nine years combined.

Experts we spoke with found that the increases, while large for the northern border, are small compared with other places on the northern border, or the southern border, which has many more crossings.

“Percentage­s can look really big, but the numbers themselves can be quite small,” said Colleen Putzel-Kavanaugh, an associate policy analyst at the Migration Policy Institute, a nonpartisa­n think tank.

Customs and Border Protection’s Buffalo Field Office, which operates ports of entry in Erie and Niagara counties, has many more encounters, 84,429 in fiscal 2023, or 12 times more than the Swanton sector. “Encounters” are CBP’s interactio­ns with people seeking admission who are not authorized to do so, and can include multiple attempts from the same person.

Along the entire southern border during 2023, there were more than 6,700 encounters per day on average, or 2.48 million total.

Immigratio­n experts caution that the number of encounters at a border is not the same thing as the number of people who tried to cross, because the same person could try to cross more than once. But Stefanik said crossings, not people.

Are these illegal crossings? Any crossing of the border without prior authorizat­ion is an illegal entry, but people have a right to ask for asylum, saying they have a fear of returning to their home country, Putzel-Kavanaugh said. These asylum-seekers are released with a charge that they entered illegally. When they ask for asylum, they can defend their charge with the reasons they are seeking asylum.

Experts attributed the higher migration at the U.S.-Canada border to an increase in migration around the world, as well as Canada’s decision in 2016 to permit Mexicans to fly there without stringent visa requiremen­ts, and a subsequent southern movement of these migrants.

Last spring, the U.S. Homeland Security Department requested that Canada reimpose the visa restrictio­ns, but Canada has not done that, said Aaron Reichlin-Melnick, policy director at the American Immigratio­n Council, a proimmigra­tion advocacy organizati­on.

Data from the Swanton sector show that the top two countries of origin for migrants crossing there are Mexico and India.

Stefanik’s office did not return a request for comment.

PolitiFact’s ruling

Stefanik claimed that there has been at some point an 800% increase in illegal crossings in the Swanton sector of the U.S.-Canada border.

Stefanik did not say which time period she was talking about. The increases in unauthoriz­ed crossings vary depending on the period, but there have been increases exceeding 800% at the border. The actual numbers of encounters remain very low compared with crossings at the southern border.

The crossings are illegal, but people seeking asylum can use their status as an asylum-seeker as a defense for crossing illegally.

We rate Stefanik’s claim True.

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Stefanik

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