We discussed content. Here we are, then, in public.
The reason I believe this is very timely and that we need to study it is that it is an issue affecting all of our constituencies. It isn't a one-party issue. There was news received this week. I believe it was reported in TVA that it is anticipated that 400 persons per day will arrive at the Lacolle, Quebec, border crossing from the U.S. I think that is something that now forces us as a committee to make this issue a priority between now and the end of June.
Also, you don't have to take my word for it. The provincial Liberal government in Quebec called the federal government's response to this unacceptable. I would like to think that the federal government wishes to solve this issue because it is unsafe and does not promote orderly migration. I also think that if we're not talking about this as a committee or if the government doesn't table a comprehensive response prior to the summer months, we're going to have a serious issue.
I'm also very worried about public perception of Canada's immigration system right now. I would like to think that Canada's debate around immigration is much different from that in other parts of the world. I think most Canadians would say they very much value the fact that Canada is open and welcoming to the world's most vulnerable and that most Canadians would say they acknowledge that we're a country of immigrants. But I think that what's happening at the Quebec border, as we see people crossing in these large numbers day after day.... More importantly, this is about the trickle-down effects that unplanned migration has on our social programs, such as that we don't really have a plan to deal with the costs of this or with integration or, frankly, with the backlogs in the IRB that we're seeing right now. So it is incumbent upon this committee to take a pretty detailed look at the issue right now.
If we don't get some action on this, I think the Canadian public is going to very quickly lose faith in Canada's immigration system, and frankly that's not something I want. I'm proud of the fact that the debate in Canada is around how we do immigration, not whether we do immigration, but if this continues unabated with no plan, Canadians rightly will question it.
There are a few things, then, I would like my colleagues to think of in terms of why this is the case. A daily rate of 400 people puts a huge strain on affordable housing and social programs. We know that the Quebec government has put forward to the federal government basically the bill for the last year; it is only going to rise. If we have 400 people per day, there are going to be 48,000 people this summer. Summer in Canada is short, so I'm not sure what summer is defined as, but in the context of that TVA article, it's June through September. These 48,000 people are just at the Quebec border alone.
Right now I think the number of people claiming asylum through illegal channels is actually greater than the number of people claiming asylum through legal channels. That's not something we want. I think it's a very bad message to the Canadian public, that we're not managing this appropriately.
I also think that if this continues unabated with no plan, we are going to have serious backlogs within the IRB. We already know that the IRB is very backlogged, and 48,000 cases in four months is crazy. How are we going to deal with that number? How are we going to process these people?
If the IRB is functioning properly and can turn cases around in a very quick period of time for those who have a legal right to be here and to have asylum, we should have a plan for supporting their integration. It should be fully costed. We might have political differences on how to do that.
The fact that the IRB has had to throw their hands up—and this isn't an indictment of the people who are working at the IRB—and say they can't process them.... They're giving up on the two-year legislative timeline. They don't know how many years it's going to take. I think it's completely unfair to send a message that with regard to the people who are illegally crossing into the country, who won't have their asylum claim heard for many years, there is no plan to deal with the burden that has on our social programs in this country or the impact it might have on other processing streams.
Many of you will have casework in your office. I'm working on a case of a privately sponsored refugee from Eritrea. The wait time for PSR through the Djibouti embassy right now is 89 months. Think about that for a minute. That's over seven years. Seven years response time to get a PSR claim is just not compassionate; it's ridiculous. The whole thing is that if you're trying to flee a situation and someone's saying you have to wait seven years, it defeats the purpose.
But I digress.
We have to solve the issue at Lacolle, Quebec. We cannot let this go through the summer, so I would like to explore some potential solutions. I don't want to speak on her behalf, but my colleague at the end of the table and I have started a healthy debate on what those solutions could be. It's the “how”.
We might politically disagree on how, but we need to study this right away. Some of the things I'm interested in looking at are ways that we can potentially enforce the safe third country agreement, for example. Yesterday in the House of Commons, I asked the minister if it would be possible to designate the entire Canadian border as a legal point of entry technically for the purposes of enforcing the safe third country agreement.
Has the minister even broached the topic of the safe third country agreement with the Americans, including that loophole? Is this a side conversation with NAFTA? What is happening here is clearly unsustainable. This is only going to become more of an issue, and I do not want this to be a conflated, partisan issue, because at the end of the day, we're talking about people who are making a very unsafe journey. When we are essentially setting up refugee camps on the U.S.-Canada border, I can't believe that anyone around the table here would think that is a positive optic or a good idea.
I don't want this to become a conflated, partisan issue, because I genuinely think that is going to reduce buy-in from the Canadian public for humanitarian immigration, and that is not something I want to see. However, in my role as critic for the official opposition, if the government is not going to take action on this.... This has been a problem. We're going into the second summer on this. I have a job to do.
I'm starting here. I am asking for permission to have the study happen right away. I don't want this motion to pass and then have it happen right before the election or something. This has to happen today. It has to happen before the summer. I think it has to take precedence. Otherwise this is just going to get worse and worse and worse. We are not going to be able to address the backlogs with the IRB because we're not reducing the demand.
Quebec is only going to get more cheesed. This isn't just Quebec. This is Manitoba. This is going to start happening at other border points. The other thing is that we're hearing from unions. The CBSA is saying they don't have enough resources to do this. My colleague, the shadow minister for Public Safety, raised the issue that people have been instructed to put 400% less time into screening people crossing the border, so it's also a public safety issue.
Under no circumstances can anyone think it's reasonable that 400 people per day illegally crossing into the country and claiming asylum is sustainable.
I look across the way and say to my colleagues that this has an impact on their Quebec caucus. The Liberal Party has a large Quebec caucus. I would be very curious to understand where they would be on....
I know typically what happens with these motions is that debate is adjourned or these sorts of things. I really think this should come to a vote today. I would think the Liberals' Quebec caucus would like to see this issue addressed before the summer, when they have to go back to their ridings and take a lot of heat from the province, especially going into a provincial election, on this being an issue. For what it's worth, I'm not trying to filibuster; I'm trying to make some legitimate arguments that this needs to happen, seriously.
I just want to read few headlines. I'm not sure if my colleagues opposite have been following the number of articles in the last few days, but it's been super high: “Canada needs more border agents to avoid summer crisis, union insists”. I understand the government has said it is putting in almost $200 million just to process the paperwork. Is throwing $200 million into this the best way to deal with it? I would argue no, but the reality is that we haven't had people in front of our committee to talk about these things. I find it very bad that our response is to say let's just put a bunch more border-crossing agents there. I think we should be finding solutions to fix the problem so that we reduce the demand on the system. Again, this is something that was in the Montreal Gazette, “Canada needs more border agents to avoid summer crisis”.
The Quebec government, Premier Couillard, has been in the media quite a bit in the last week, and he's said that “Ottawa’s response to his request for assistance on the refugee crisis reflects 'a complete ignorance' of what’s going on at the border between his province and New York state.” From my understanding, and I've been to the border in Manitoba, it's just a flood of people every day. I think we also have to ask ourselves at what point this starts becoming a route for human trafficking and human smuggling. I'm hearing anecdotal stories of this. We've seen people who have entered the country through this route, who have been found in possession of child pornography. I believe there was a child pornography smuggling ring that was also utilizing this route to enter Canada. We're hearing from border agents that they can't keep up with the volume. Even if you put one million border agents there, is that the best use of resources? No. What is their ability to actually screen people?
This headline is what really...: “Quebec says 400 asylum-seekers a day could enter province this summer”, and the article says:
Officials said...it is expecting...400 people to cross the border through forests and wooded areas every day this summer—up from 250.... Quebec Immigration Minister David Heurtel explained 50.2 per cent of asylum seekers enter Canada via Quebec, but not many of them are staying in the province.
That is my rationale for the main motion. I would like to propose first, though, an amendment to the motion. I move an amendment that the committee begin its study immediately and that the committee table its response prior to the House rising for the summer, and just to put a date on it, let's say by the end of the first week in June.