----- Original Message -----
From: spiker
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Sent: Saturday, July 28, 2001 4:56 PM
Subject: Canada, U.S. eye scrapping border
Source:
The Toronto Star
http://www.thestar.com/
Canada, U.S. eye scrapping border
`We should think of the border not as a frontier but a meeting place'
http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?GXHC_gx_session_id_=97a62346f0f72ab0&pagename=thestar/Layout/Article_Type1&c=Article&cid=996271752349&call_page=TS_News&call_pageid=968332188492&call_pagepath=News/News&col=968793972154
William Walker
WASHINGTON BUREAU
WASHINGTON - Canada and the United States are poised to consider erasing
the world's longest undefended border and ease immigration restrictions for
workers.
The 49th Parallel would become a ``Main Street North America'' rather than
a restrictive checkpoint for the 200 million people who cross it annually
and $2 billion (Cdn) in goods that cross daily, Canadian government sources
in the U.S. and Canada say.
The 4,800-kilometre border, which some government officials now consider
``obsolete,'' would remain in symbolic terms. But practically, it would
function more as a border between provinces than between two sovereign nations.
Under a new concept of continental border enforcement, each nation would
defend its share of the North American perimeter. Officials at entry
points would question new arrivals to weed out illegals and potential
terrorists. Once inside, people would be able to travel freely.
It's a notion Canadian Immigration Minister Elinor Caplan has already
suggested publicly.
``Modernizing the border is something the department has been looking at as
a longer-term project and the perimeter strategy is something that's being
looked at,'' said spokesperson Alain Laurencelle.
He said Canada will wait until it sees the upcoming U.S.-Mexico agreement
before deciding its course. ``Obviously we're going to look at what other
countries have done with their agreements. That doesn't necessarily mean
that's what will be done here, but we'll look at it.'' Under the plan,
Canada and the United States may harmonize their visa processes, sharing
intelligence to decide together which countries would require such
documentation to enter their perimeter, official sources said.
Michael Kergin, Canada's ambassador to Washington, remarked in a recent
speech that ``many cross-border stereotypes have outgrown themselves, just
as in many ways the 20th century perception of the border is now obsolete.''
`In the 21st century, in the case of Canada and the United States, the
traditional concept of an international border has lost its relevance.'
- Michael Kergin, Canada's ambassador to U.S.
``In the 21st century, in the case of Canada and the United States, the
traditional concept of an international border has lost its relevance,''
Kergin said.
Similarly, Paul Cellucci, U.S. ambassador to Canada, said in a speech
Thursday in Whistler, B.C., that an ``aging and outdated infrastructure and
regulatory system is still in existence at our borders.'' ``I believe we
should think of the border not as a frontier but as a meeting place,'' said
Cellucci, the former Massachusetts governor.
Open border could reduce retail prices
``A `Main Street' where people meet, traffic moves and business gets done.
``The more user-friendly it becomes, the more it can facilitate the
commerce that enriches our societies. That's where Washington and Ottawa
need help from each of your provinces, from interested businesses and
stakeholders and from concerned citizens.'' The free flow of goods worth
more than $700 billion a year across the Canada-U.S. border - producing
the world's largest trading relationship - would reduce retail prices by up
to 6 per cent, officials and business leaders believe.
For example, General Motors has estimated that for each minute its trucks
sit waiting at a border point, the company loses $1 million (Cdn).
In addition to goods and services, Canada and the United States are also
considering easing restrictions for citizens to work in both countries as
``guest workers'' who could earn citizenship status based on length of
employment.
The new reforms, to be put in motion this fall, are all part of the
increasing integration of Canada, the United States and Mexico under the
7-year-old North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA).
Prime Minister Jean Chrétien's foreign policy adviser, David Zussman, has
proposed such changes under a ``NAFTA-plus'' plan for North American
integration.
Chrétien and U.S. president Bill Clinton signed a 1995 accord to pursue a
new border ``vision'' for the 49th Parallel, but it never jelled into a
comprehensive program.
The sources expect the proposed changes to gain impetus from the Sept. 5
visit to Washington of Mexican President Vicente Fox, who will be hosted by
President George W. Bush at his first official state dinner.
Bush and Fox are scheduled to sign an agreement offering immigration status
to up to3 million Mexicans living in America illegally, and to free up
travel between the two countries.
Bush is widely considered to be courting the huge U.S. Hispanic vote.
The agreement will be based on a task force report delivered to Bush last
week by Secretary of State Colin Powell and Attorney-General John Ashcroft,
who recommended changes.
Canadian government officials in Ottawa are awaiting details of the
Bush-Fox agreement before they start putting together their own plan,
sources told The Star.
Bush said this week he's considering applying his immigration plan to other
countries.
``We'll consider all folks here,'' the president said. ``I'm
open-minded. I'll listen to all proposals.'' Experts on North America
agree that such integration now appears inevitable and that in many
respects, the Canada-U.S. border is redundant given the integration of the
two countries' economies.
``I think we might see, in 10 years, an unrestricted border between Canada
and the United States,'' said Robert Litan, vice-president of the
Washington-based Brookings Institution, which will hold a conference on
North American integration this fall.
``The question is to what extent you really want to have a new North
American community, if you like, which involves the U.S., Canada and Mexico
. . . there are some real advantages,'' said Peter Hakim, president of
Washington think tank Inter-American Dialogue.
In 1986, president Ronald Reagan's blanket amnesty law allowed more than 3
million undocumented residents of the U.S. to gain permanent residency.
It appears the Bush initiative, which reflects the former Texas governor's
understanding of Mexico's border problems, will have far-reaching
implications for Canada.
``The question we've asked,'' a Canadian official said, ``is can you
differentiate between a northern (Canada-U.S.) border and a southern border
and have two sets of rules? The answer we're coming to is no, you
cannot.'' The situation mirrors what happened in the early 1990s, when
Washington announced a bilateral trade deal with Mexico. To protect
Canadian interests, Ottawa soon joined in what became NAFTA.
`I told you so' attitude expected in Canada
The irony for Chrétien's government is his Liberal party ran aggressive
television ads in the 1987 federal election showing a map with someone
erasing the Canada-U.S. border, warning voters this would happen under the
then-proposed Canada-U.S. free trade agreement, NAFTA's predecessor.
Prime minister Brian Mulroney's Progressive Conservatives responded with an
ad drawing the border back in, calling the warning unfounded.
Canadian government sources say they're prepared, during this new debate,
to see an ``I told you so'' opposition from nationalistic groups such as
the Council of Canadians, who fought against NAFTA.
``The trick for us is . . . this is all part of globalization and North
American integration. It creates jobs and produces wealth, but it also
puts pressure on other social policy issues,'' a source said.