Goodale won't call border crossers a 'crisis' - but U.S. did after 2017 Quebec border tour - Action News
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Goodale won't call border crossers a 'crisis' - but U.S. did after 2017 Quebec border tour

Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale refused to use the word crisis when describing the phenomenon of border crossers streaming into Canada during a committee appearance yesterday, but internal emails obtained by CBC show U.S. officials saw it differently when they came to Canada last year.

U.S. wants to 'discourage' the movement as much as it can, CBSA officials wrote after Lacolle tour

A U.S. border patrol officer, left, shakes hands with an RCMP officer across the border on Wednesday, March 8, 2017 in Hemmingford, Quebec. (Ryan Remiorz/Canadian Press)

Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale refused to use the word "crisis" when describing the phenomenon of border crossers streaming into Canada during a committee appearance in Ottawa yesterday.

However, internal emails obtained by CBC show U.S. officials saw things differently when they came to Canada last year, when the flow of asylum seekers crossing the border was at its height.

RCMPofficers stopped 3,134 people in July of 2017 and5,712 peoplein August, 2017.

Numbers released earlier this month show the number of people intercepted by theRCMP decreased significantly last month, with 1,263 entering the country outside official border points compared to 1,869 in May.

Speaking in front of the Commons immigration committee on irregular migration on Tuesday, Goodale defended his government's plan to deal with the spike in asylum seekers crossing into Canada, while swatting away Conservative claims theborder-crossings are a crisis.

"There is a challengebut it is not a crisis," Goodale said.

But that's the very word U.S. officials used to describe the situation at the border inLacolle, Que. when they came for a tour last summer.

According toemailsobtained under access to information laws, last July the U.S. embassy and the U.S. Border Patrol asked the Canada Border Services Agency for permission to tour the facilities near the Roxham Road border crossing and chat with RCMP officers there.

It was pitched as a way to show "how well we work together in the eyes of the embassy leadership," said one email from a U.S. Border Patrol staffer.

U.S. side'looking to do more'

At first, the Canadian side resisted the Americans' request for a tour.

"My concern is that it would be better to have a consensus and to review our procedures and processes with our Canadian partners before exchanging themwith our American partners," wrote Pierre Provost, CBSA'sacting regional director general for theQuebec region.

Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness Minister Ralph Goodale and Minister of Border Security and Organized Crime Reduction Bill Blair appear as witnesses at a House of Commons standing committee on immigration in Ottawa on Tuesday, July 24, 2018. (Sean Kilpatrick/Canadian Press)

But they eventually went ahead with the tour.As oneCBSAstrategicadviser wrote in an email, "itwould be useless to refuse this request since they would then only have to cross the point of entry to come see the Canadian side."

About 16 people took part in the tour, according to an itinerary recently released under the Access to Information Act.

The day after the Aug. 2 tour, U.S. officials sent a note to the Canadian side promising action.

"We received a heads up that the U.S. Charg d'Affaires will send a cable to Washington stating that the Lacolle situation is a 'crisis,'" wrote Melissa Bindner, a strategic adviser with CBSA, in an email.

"Border Patrol will be looking to do more and have more resources. They want to discourage and interrupt the movement as much as they can within the current leg (sic) framework. They will also try a better (communications) approach to discourage the movement."

Goodalesays we shouldn't be surprised

The tour happened before U.S. Ambassador Kelly Craft officially took up her position, so the charg d'affaires would have been the top serving diplomat at the embassy at the time.

Neither the U.S. embassy nor border patrol would answer specific questions about the tour and the promise of more resources.

The U.S. embassy in Ottawa said it "doesn't comment on internal U.S. government communication" and would only add that the U.S. "is working closely with the Government of Canada to understand the evolving flow of northbound asylum seekers."

During Goodale's committee appearance Tuesday, he noted that irregular migration is a global problem.

"We should not be surprised that it's affecting Canada too," he said. "And we should not expect there to be easy, quick solutions to what is a complex, global problem."

Jean-Pierre Fortin, president of the Customs and Immigration Union, said he's glad to see the U.S. called the situationa crisis, even though the Canadian side hasn't.

He said it wasn't until May of this year that his team finally noticed a change in operations between the Canadian and American border services.

Fortin pointed to the work both countries are doing to stop Nigerian asylum seekerswith American travel visas from entering Canada.Immigration Minister AhmedHussendescribed it as comparing notes.

Since Canada talked to U.S. officials earlier this year aboutthe growing trend of Nigerians with U.S. visas seeking asylum in Canada,those officials have been applying more rigorousscreening procedures to the American visa application process. That has led to a 10 per cent increase in the refusal rate in the U.S. system,said Hussen.

Fortin said his members alsohave noticed more of a U.S. presence at the border since last summer's tour.

"They're pretty well staffed," he said.

'Seamless' operation, says new minister

The Canadian side wouldn't respond to Fortin's comments.

Members of the CBSA walk by a tent housing asylum seekers at the Canada-United States border in Lacolle, Que. Thursday, August 10, 2017. (Graham Hughes/Canadian Press)

"The Canada Border Services Agency routinely meets with its domestic and international law enforcement partners, such as U.S. Customsand Border Patrol, to discuss various border-related issues," wrote spokesperson Patrizia Giolti in an email.

"The CBSA emphasizes a multiple border approach which often involves domestic and international partners to enforce Canada's border legislation along the travel continuum: at the earliest opportunity overseas, in transit, and upon arrival at the Canadian border."

While hundreds of asylum seekers are still streaming across the border, their numbers seem to be falling.

Canada's government recently pivoted its response to the situation by appointing Bill Blair as minister in charge of border security. His mandate letter hasn't been made public yet.

Blair visited the Roxham Road crossing in Lacolle, Que., on Monday and described the processing as "absolutely seamless."

"It was a really impressive operation," he told the immigration committeeTuesday.

Conservative immigration critic Michelle Rempel tabled the motion for the "emergency" meeting,noting that the influx of asylum seekers is putting a serious strain on some cities like Montreal and Toronto.

With files from the CBC's Kathleen Harris