Canadians Take Notice, the U.S. Is Militarizing the Border
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DETROIT – About 50 feet before a car from Canada reaches the border inspection booth, the screenings begin.
A camera snaps your license plate.
An electronic card reader mounted on a yellow post scans your car for the presence of any radio-frequency ID cards inside. If there is an enhanced driver's license embedded with biometric information, its unique PIN number is read without you offering it.
The Customs and Border Protection computer connects with your province's database and in less than a second – .56 to be exact – your personal information is uploaded to a screen in the booth. A second camera snaps the driver's face.
Welcome to the United States of America.
If Canadians were under the impression that the Canada-loving U.S. President Barack Obama would heed pleas to loosen border controls to ease trade and traffic, there should no longer be any confusion. He has not.
Beginning June 1, you'd better have that passport ready. Or if you have an enhanced driver's licence from British Columbia, Manitoba or Quebec, make sure it's in your wallet, ready to show. (Ontario is now processing applications for the cards.)
Some Canadian MPs, border state lawmakers and Detroit-Windsor area businesses expect the worst when the new controls kick in.
"Either it's going to cause a massive backup, or it's going to cause a dramatic decrease in travellers across the border, or it's going to cause both," says Melissa Roy of the Detroit Regional Chamber, the largest chamber of commerce organization in the U.S. "It's an absolute nightmare."
Obama's top officials - Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton - signed off long ago on the June 1 deadline for the infamous Western Hemisphere Travel Initiative. That's the George W. Bush-era policy that Congress pushed through under the 9/11 intelligence reform bill, which requires every person entering the United States by air, sea or land to carry a passport or U.S. government-approved secure identity document.
Napolitano says Canadians had better get used to it. "The future is that there will be a real border," she told a trade group last month.
This is what that border already looks like:
A post-mounted scanner screens your vehicle for radioactive material that could be used to build a "dirty bomb" - a probe so sensitive it will detect if you've recently had a medical test that used isotopes.
As you pull up to the booth, a computer monitor may be filling with information about you, even before the guard asks, "Where are you coming from? What's your citizenship? Where are you headed? Why?"
If a border lookout, arrest warrant or criminal record pops up on the guard's screen, or if something doesn't quite add up - maybe you're sweating bullets on a cold day - expect to get hauled over for a secondary inspection.
The port of entry at the Ambassador Bridge in Detroit - the busiest commercial land crossing in North America, through which a quarter of all Canada-U.S. trade passes - has strict controls, as does the Detroit-Windsor tunnel.
Border agents, packing pepper spray, collapsible batons and 9-mm automatic pistols, are the first point of contact for people and cargo alike. Sometimes their supervisors order vehicle sweeps at random. Then for 30 minutes, agents will pop every trunk, just for a look-see.
See more stories tagged with: us, military, border, canada, border crossing, police
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