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U.S., Canada Take Steps to Decrease
Border Wait Times
("American
Shipper")
The United
States and Canada announced progress Friday towards
their goal of increasing security and decreasing congestion
for travelers and commercial vehicles crossing the border
between the world's two largest trading partners.
Tom Ridge, U.S. secretary of homeland security, and
Anne McLellan, Canada's deputy prime minister, pledged
to reduce transit times between Windsor, Canada and
Detroit by 25 percent in the next year. The cities are
connected by the Ambassador Bridge and the Windsor-Detroit
Tunnel, which were used last year by more than 1.8 million
commercial vehicles and 13.4 million cars.
"The 25 percent challenge is an ambitious and achievable
goal. We are committed to providing the leadership and
the investments necessary to improving flows through
this critical trade corridor," Ridge said after
a joint meeting in Detroit with private sector tunnel,
bridge and ferry operators in the region.
Inadequate infrastructure at border checkpoints has
hindered so-called "smart-border" initiatives
since 2001 that rely on technology to identify and pre-clear
passengers and cargo because there are no additional
express lanes for those providing advance information
to bypass traffic backups.
McLellan said the Canada Border Services Agency will
begin immediately hiring an additional 30 officers to
increase by 20 percent the amount of commercial traffic
that can be checked and cleared at Windsor.
In addition to short-term measures in the region, the
two neighbors said they have completed a framework for
negotiations on a pre-clearance system that would involve
reversing the traditional notion of conducting border
checks after the border has been physically crossed
and stationing U.S. and Canadian officers in the other
country to inspect people and cargo before border transit.
The switch in protocol would help intercept potential
terrorists using explosives-laden vehicles before they
crossed the many bridges and tunnels that are vital
economic lifelines between the two nations.
In October, Ridge and McLellan announced plans for a
pre-clearance pilot project at the Peace Bridge involving
the relocation of all U.S. primary and secondary border
operations for both commercial and passenger traffic
from Buffalo to Fort Erie, Canada. Officials said Friday
they are studying suitable locations for a reciprocal
pilot to base Canadian border functions on the U.S.
side of the border, such as at the Thousand Islands
Bridge or the Queenston-Lewiston crossing. Both countries
will also need to change their national laws governing
extra-territorial authority for law enforcement officers.
The moves could be interim steps toward integrated border
inspection areas in which customs authorities conduct
joint operations, something U.S. officials said they
are considering.
Additional measures on tap under the "smart-border"
initiative include the expansion of U.S. pre-clearance
facilities and inspectors at the Halifax International
Airport as soon as the construction of the necessary
infrastructure is completed and seven more pre-clearance
sites for commercial vehicles, according to a joint
status report on border cooperation.
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