Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Residents Near Canada-U.S. Border To Be Paid For Asylum Seeker Disruption: Ottawa

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Dec, 2018 10:13 PM

    OTTAWA — Quebecers living by the Canada-United States border where thousands of migrants have crossed irregularly into the country since 2017 will be eligible for payments of up to $25,000, the federal government announced Wednesday.


    Life along the previously sleepy Roxham Road — the main entry point for migrants entering the country on foot — has been disturbed, and residents deserve to be compensated, Border Security Minister Bill Blair said.


    "I've been there. I've spoken to the residents. I've seen the level of activity of the RCMP, the (Canada Border Services Agency) and other officials that has impacted what is otherwise a quiet, rural road," Blair told reporters.


    Roughly 96 per cent of all migrants who have crossed illegally into Canada since 2017 have done so at Roxham Road.


    The federal Immigration Department says 16,000 people crossed the Canada-U.S. border illegally into Quebec through the end of October this year, and about 19,000 did last year.


    Bureaucrats divided the Roxham Road area into three zones based on proximity to the border. People living in the closest zone are eligible to receive up to $25,000, those in the next closest $10,000, and those in the third zone $2,500.


    A spokesperson for Blair could not say Wednesday how much the compensation will cost Ottawa.


    Conservative party Leader Andrew Scheer said in the House of Commons he worries irregular crossings will become a permanent problem.


    "The prime minister needs to stop asking others to pay for his failures," Scheer said.


    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau responded by stating Ottawa is investing $173 million to improve border security as well as to decrease the time it takes to process asylum seekers claims.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Six People Dead In Separate Crashes On British Columbia Highways: RCMP

    Six People Dead In Separate Crashes On British Columbia Highways: RCMP
    Mounties in British Columbia say it has been a deadly few days on British Columbia's highways, with six people killed in separate crashes.

    Six People Dead In Separate Crashes On British Columbia Highways: RCMP

    WATCH: Raj Grewal Rethinking Decision To Resign As MP, Says He Has Repaid Gambling Debts

    Liberal MP Raj Grewal says he has repaid his sizable gambling debts and is now reconsidering his hasty decision to quit politics.

    WATCH: Raj Grewal Rethinking Decision To Resign As MP, Says He Has Repaid Gambling Debts

    Jury Recommends Mental Health Education For RCMP Members Following Inquest

    The inquest heard Lemaitre released inaccurate information about the case of Robert Dziekanski that his superiors wouldn't let him correct.

    Jury Recommends Mental Health Education For RCMP Members Following Inquest

    Video Of Sexual Relations Can Be Used At Grievance In Fire Department Firings

    VANCOUVER — Two employees of the fire department in Vernon, B.C., are battling to keep their jobs after a videotape showed them having sexual relations in the interim fire chief's office.

    Video Of Sexual Relations Can Be Used At Grievance In Fire Department Firings

    Tears At Calgary Murder Trial As Officer Describes How He Discovered Girl's Body

    Tears At Calgary Murder Trial As Officer Describes How He Discovered Girl's Body
    CALGARY — A police officer testified Friday how he discovered a young girl's lifeless body in some bushes east of Calgary, triggering an outburst of emotion in the courtroom during a double murder trial.

    Tears At Calgary Murder Trial As Officer Describes How He Discovered Girl's Body

    'Uber For Snow Removal:' New App Inspired By Winnipeg's Winter Weather

    When the first big snow dump covered Winnipeg this week, the developers of a new phone app put their technology to the test.

    'Uber For Snow Removal:' New App Inspired By Winnipeg's Winter Weather