The following article is excerpted from the Toronto
Star of
July 3rd, 2002
DEPUTY PRIME Minister John Manley and U.S.
Homeland Security
Adviser Tom Ridge are making significant progress in speeding
up legal and regulatory impediments to cross-border movement
of goods and people, something that's essential for our
economy.
Following the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks there were
fears by
Canadian businesses that the United States would clamp down
on border security and slow cross-border traffic to a crawl,
badly damaging Canadian exports and hence Canadian jobs and
future investment.
Such fears were exaggerated because it was also in the
U.S.
interest to keep the border open.
But the terrorism crisis did lead to much-needed attention
to the border — attention that would have been needed even if
there had been no terrorist attack.
Last week Manley and Ridge released a progress report
on
their December Smart Border Declaration and its 30-point
action plan.
Significant improvements are being made so that border
crossings for legitimate travellers and products could
actually end up being easier than before the Sept. 11
terrorist attacks.
But despite this progress, there's still a big
problem —
overloaded border-crossing infrastructure with bridges,
tunnels and highway approaches becoming bottlenecks due to
years of neglect of much-needed investment.
The two countries hope to overcome some of the growing
bottleneck problems by using high-technology processing
systems and by doing more of the border clearing work some
distance away from actual border-crossing points.
But despite these measures, there's also a need for
greater
border investment.
In his budget last December, then finance minister Paul
Martin allocated $600 million
over five years to help
eliminate border bottlenecks.
The funding was for new or improved highway access to
border
crossings, processing centres for vehicles to speed up
clearance and so-called soft infrastructure such as high-tech
transportation systems, which electronically monitor trucks
and trains crossing the border.
Since then, though, little has been heard of this
funding,
suggesting delays in needed border improvements.
The federal government's requirement that provinces,
municipalities and the private sector share the costs could
add to delays.
It also has to work with the United States. Manley is
expected to make a statement on the fund later this summer.
Since the most urgent need is in Ontario, much of the
shared-cost money will have to come from Ontario.
The six busiest border-crossing points are all in
Ontario
due in large part to the presence of the auto industry.
Last November, Manley acknowledged years of neglect
were
compounding border problems.
"The system was not perfect before Sept. 11," he said.
"Ninety per cent of Canada-U.S. road traffic was crammed
through only 11 ports of entry, most of which are on tunnels
and bridges."
Daily commercial vehicle traffic had gone from 20,000 in
1991 to 37,000 in 2000, and is expected to grow in the
future.
This was not simply a logistics challenge; there were
also
security issues from Canada's point of view.
For
example, in 2000 — while American border officials
stopped 14,000 criminals from entering the United States, Canadian border officials
stopped 21,000 from trying to enter
Canada from the United States.
Some 50 per cent of guns used in crimes in Canada were
shipped illegally from the United States. Moreover, more than
60 per cent of Canada's refugee claimants were entering
Canada from the United States.
The need for action had been highlighted well before
the
Sept. 11 terrorist acts in a December, 2000, report of the Canada-U.S. Partnership Forum.
The forum had been launched by Prime Minister Jean
Chrétien
and former U.S. president Bill Clinton in 1999 to improve
border management.
"While traffic volumes are projected to increase
by 10 per
cent annually over the next decade, border infrastructure and
inspection resources are currently stretched to the limit at
key border crossings," the report warned.
Indeed, many groups had been raising concerns about
border
infrastructure well before Sept. 11, including the Public
Policy Forum and the Canadian Manufacturers and Exporters
association.
The issue is of particular concern to the auto industry,
which operates on a very tight, just-in-time delivery system.
The biggest single action that could be taken to help the
auto industry would be to improve border access.
Manley and Ridge deserve credit for the progress they
have
made.
But without fast attention to border infrastructure needs,
we will still have a problem with cross-border movement of
goods and people, with serious ramifications for jobs and
investment in Canada.