Skip to main content

Border crossers task force to meet, review next steps for asylum seekers

Ahmed Hussen, Ralph Goodale, Brenda Shanahan, asylum seekers, Saint-Bernard-de-Lacolle,
Ahmed Hussen, Ralph Goodale and Brenda Shanahan comment on the influx of asylum seekers crossing the border into Canada from the United States on Monday, August 21, 2017 near Saint-Bernard-de-Lacolle, Que. Photo by The Canadian Press/Paul Chiasson

The federal-provincial task force charged with managing an unprecedented flow of asylum seekers over the Canada-U.S. border will meet Wednesday in Montreal to review the next steps in handling the surge.

Though the numbers of those crossing into Quebec seems to have moderated in recent days, officials are still ramping up the government's ability to process their claims for refugee status.

Immigration Minister Ahmed Hussen says additional members of his department are being deployed in Montreal to allow initial claims for asylum to be assessed faster.

He says the goal is eventually to ensure his department can process those claims at the temporary shelters and camps set up to handle the 6,000 people who have crossed since July.

The vast majority are Haitians fleeing a change in U.S. immigration policy that could see them deported, but they're one of several groups now facing that reality.

Hussen says he's aware others could also be eyeing Canada as a safe haven, but the government would be able to respond quickly should another wave of asylum seekers materialize.

Comments