The migrants had been bussed north from Texas as part of an operation to disperse border-crossers among 'sanctuary cities'

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In the latest indication of the increasingly porous and chaotic Canada-U.S. border, a Colorado official was recently allegedly recorded attempting to empty out a homeless shelter by offering to send residents “to the Canadian border.”

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“You don’t have to walk anywhere, we can buy you a free ticket. You can go to any city. We can take you up to the Canadian border, wherever,” Andres Carrera, a “newcomer communications liaison” with the City of Denver, was recorded telling arrivals at a migrant shelter.

After explaining that Denver already has “too many migrants” and that resources are sapped, Carrera ends his speech by asking, “Okay, who wants to travel to different cities where there is more work?”

In comments to a local NBC affiliate, the City of Denver said that it wasn’t their policy to send migrants directly to Canadian cities, but they will distribute free bus tickets to U.S. stops that are close to the Canadian border, if that’s what migrants want.

It’s not the first time that a U.S. city has been caught attempting to alleviate shelter space by exporting migrants to Canada. And it also occurs amid a record-breaking surge of illegal migrants going the other direction.

Last month, U.S. border agents in New York, New Hampshire and Vermont all reported arresting record numbers of migrants entering illegally from Canada.

In 2023, 7,000 migrants were arrested attempting to illegally enter those states via Quebec, Ontario and New Brunswick — a number that was higher than the last 12 years combined.

“I have never seen anything like it,” Erik Lavallee, a Vermont-based U.S. Border Patrol Agent, told CBS last month. Just last week, a social media post by the United States Border Patrol reported apprehending an SUV packed with nine U.K. nationals that was attempting to enter from Quebec by smashing its way through a farm on the Vermont border.

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Intercepted vehicle incursion! Swanton Border Patrol Agents apprehended 9 United Kingdom nationals in a vehicle that crashed through a landowner's fence attempting to illegally enter the United States near Highgate, Vermont. Report suspicious activity by calling 1-800-689-3362. pic.twitter.com/NNNm43muqo

In the Denver case, however, the migrants had come to the U.S. via its southern border, which is experiencing a simultaneous surge in illegal crossings that is exponentially higher than anything coming from Canada.

According to February figures from U.S. Customs and Border Protection, more than 7 million people — an amount roughly equivalent to the population of Quebec — have illegally crossed the southwestern U.S. border in just the last three years.

Beginning in 2022, this has prompted Texas Governor Greg Abbott to send busloads of migrants to northern states — particularly to jurisdictions that have declared themselves “sanctuary cities” where local law enforcement are ordered not to cooperate in enforcing federal immigration law.

The migrants being addressed by Carrera were only the latest such busload to arrive in Denver, a certified “sanctuary city” that has thus far received roughly 40,000 bused migrants from Texas.

Denver now officially joins New York City in the ranks of U.S. “sanctuary cities” attempting to cope with a surge of bused-in migrants by offering them free passage to Canada.

In February 2023, New York City mayor Erik Adams confirmed that his administration was funding the “re-ticketing process” of migrants who wanted to move elsewhere, including by illegally crossing into Canada.

“Some want to go to Canada, some want to go to warmer states, and we are there for them as they continue to move on with their pursuit of this dream,” Adams told a local Fox affiliate.

According to an official tally by the Office of the Texas Governor, New York City has been the prime target of their operation to bus migrants to U.S. sanctuary cities.

As to what’s prompted the surge of migrants illegally entering the U.S. from Canada, one factor might be the Trudeau government’s 2016 decision to rescind visa requirements for Mexican nationals — a policy Ottawa just reversed after it prompted a massive influx of asylum-seekers.

Crossing into the U.S. via the sparse Canadian border is also generally smoother and less likely to result in arrest.

In February, an investigation by the Daily Mail detailed a New Jersey-based gang coordinating illegal entries to the U.S. via Canada for $6,000 a head. The report said the Canada route had become popular among wealthier migrants who wanted to avoid “chaotic and dangerous conditions on the southern border.”

Border agents have reported that the migrants coming in from Canada are often attempting to avoid detection, in sharp contrast to migrants coming in via Mexico who are often seeking out border patrol agents so they can claim asylum.

In January, Plattsburgh, N.Y.-based border agent Raymond Bresnahan told local media that while most of the migrants coming in from Canada are merely seeking employment, they are seeing not-insignificant numbers of “aggravated felons.” “We still catch a lot of bad people,” he said.

The Trudeau government’s main policy announcement for this week is what they’re calling a National School Food Program. It’s $1 billion over five years, with a goal of feeding 400,000 children per year. With Canadian school districts counting roughly 195 instructional days per year, that’s $2.56 per meal (or $1.23 if they’re covering both lunch and breakfast) – minus whatever overhead costs the program incurs.

Awkwardly, the announcement comes within hours of a report by Postmedia’s David Pugliese finding that the Canadian Armed Forces is so badly under-resourcing some of its personnel that they had to rely on donated food to avoid starving. It also comes despite the fact that one of Trudeau government’s most frequent boasts about their record is the claim that they have lifted “more than 650,000 children” out of poverty (a National School Food program actually repeated this claim twice). And yet, there was no acknowledgement of how this might be at odds with their simultaneous claim that “nearly one in four children in Canada do not get enough food.”

B.C. is one of only a handful of jurisdictions around the world that is experimenting with the notion that decriminalizing hard drugs will reduce rates of drug abuse. And one of those other jurisdictions just ended their experiment after only two years, declaring the whole thing a failure. The U.S. state of Oregon has just recriminalized personal use possession of hard drugs, although they’ve done so with the provision that drug users convicted under the new law should preferably be ordered into treatment rather than being sent to jail. Portugal is famous for its success in reducing rates of drug abuse as part of a policy that decriminalized hard drugs. But the Portuguese model paired decriminalization with an extremely aggressive program of prosecuting drug dealers and forcing drug users into treatment.

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FIRST READING: Colorado official recorded trying to send illegal migrants to Canada

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03.04.2024

The migrants had been bussed north from Texas as part of an operation to disperse border-crossers among 'sanctuary cities'

You can save this article by registering for free here. Or sign-in if you have an account.

First Reading is a daily newsletter keeping you posted on the travails of Canadian politicos, all curated by the National Post’s own Tristin Hopper. To get an early version sent directly to your inbox, sign up here.

In the latest indication of the increasingly porous and chaotic Canada-U.S. border, a Colorado official was recently allegedly recorded attempting to empty out a homeless shelter by offering to send residents “to the Canadian border.”

Enjoy the latest local, national and international news.

Enjoy the latest local, national and international news.

Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience.

Don't have an account? Create Account

“You don’t have to walk anywhere, we can buy you a free ticket. You can go to any city. We can take you up to the Canadian border, wherever,” Andres Carrera, a “newcomer communications liaison” with the City of Denver, was recorded telling arrivals at a migrant shelter.

After explaining that Denver already has “too many migrants” and that resources are sapped, Carrera ends his speech by asking, “Okay, who wants to travel to different cities where there is more work?”

In comments to a local NBC affiliate, the City of Denver said that it wasn’t their policy to send migrants directly to Canadian cities, but they will distribute free bus tickets to U.S. stops that are close to the Canadian border, if that’s what migrants want.

It’s not the first time that a U.S. city has been caught attempting to alleviate shelter space by exporting migrants to Canada. And it also occurs amid a record-breaking surge of illegal migrants going the other direction.

Last month, U.S. border agents in New York, New Hampshire and Vermont all reported arresting record numbers of migrants entering illegally from Canada.

In 2023, 7,000 migrants were arrested attempting to illegally enter those states via Quebec, Ontario and New Brunswick — a number that was higher than the last 12 years combined.

“I have never seen anything like it,” Erik Lavallee, a Vermont-based U.S. Border Patrol Agent, told CBS last month. Just last week, a social media post by the United States Border Patrol reported........

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