Wednesday, February 11, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. Transit Police Announce End To Agreement With Canada Border Service

The Canadian Press, 21 Feb, 2015 12:44 PM
    VANCOUVER — Metro Vancouver Transit Police are changing the way officers deal with undocumented migrants during fare checks over the case of a Mexican woman who hanged herself while awaiting deportation.
     
    Lucia Vega Jimenez (HE'-MEN'-ez) died in hospital in December 2013, days after security guards found her hanging inside a shower stall inside a holding facility at Vancouver's airport.
     
    Weeks earlier, Transit Police stopped her for fare evasion and called Canada Border Services Agency, which arrested Jimenez when a database check showed she had been previously deported from the country.
     
    Transit Police spokeswoman Anne Drennan says the force has discontinued its agreement with the border agency, and an individual must be wanted on an outstanding warrant before officers make a similar arrest.
     
    She says the coroner's inquest that followed the death of Jimenez stimulated discussion and brought the issue to the forefront.
     
    Harsha Walia of Transportation Not Deportation says about 40 community groups backed her organization's demand for change, which believes transit should not be a border checkpoint.
     
    "We're trying to move as much as possible to what we would consider to be fundamental community policing and we believe that this is one of the basic fundamentals of community policing," says Drennan.
     
    "In our case, as Transit Police, we want all persons to be able to access transit regardless of their status, and we think that this directive is making a concerted effort towards that goal."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Indian Couple's Three-And-Half-Year-Old Son Refused Entry Into Canada

    Indian Couple's Three-And-Half-Year-Old Son Refused Entry Into Canada
    A three-and-half-year-old Indian boy has been refused reunion with his parents -- living in Canada as permanent residents for about two years -- because of a human error and apparently inflexible governmental reading of immigration regulations, a media report said Thursday.

    Indian Couple's Three-And-Half-Year-Old Son Refused Entry Into Canada

    Relative Begs Secret Letter-Writer To Reveal Self To Solve Arson That Killed Three BC Women And Baby

    Relative Begs Secret Letter-Writer To Reveal Self To Solve Arson That Killed Three BC Women And Baby
    A family member of three women and a baby killed in a Prince Rupert, B.C., apartment arson 25 years ago is pleading for an anonymous letter writer to help solve the cold case.

    Relative Begs Secret Letter-Writer To Reveal Self To Solve Arson That Killed Three BC Women And Baby

    B.C. To Post Budget Surplus, But Spending Not On Agenda, Says Finance Minister

    B.C. To Post Budget Surplus, But Spending Not On Agenda, Says Finance Minister
    VICTORIA — Finance Minister Mike de Jong says this year's budget bottom line is rosier than originally forecast but that doesn't mean the government is about to embark on a spending spree.

    B.C. To Post Budget Surplus, But Spending Not On Agenda, Says Finance Minister

    Big city mayors try to leverage election year as they press feds for money

    Big city mayors try to leverage election year as they press feds for money
    TORONTO — Canada's big city mayors met on Thursday hoping to leverage a looming federal election into billions of dollars worth of commitments from Ottawa for transit, affordable housing and other big-money projects.

    Big city mayors try to leverage election year as they press feds for money

    Explore newly open foreign markets, trade minister tells shy Canadian companies

    Explore newly open foreign markets, trade minister tells shy Canadian companies
    OTTAWA — The federal government faces a new hurdle as it shifts from negotiating new free trade deals to implementing them: Canadian companies that are overly cautious about courting new business overseas.

    Explore newly open foreign markets, trade minister tells shy Canadian companies

    Canadian government: 'Very optimistic' trade war might be averted with U.S.

    Canadian government: 'Very optimistic' trade war might be averted with U.S.
    WASHINGTON — The Canadian government is expressing optimism that a trade war might be averted with the United States in a long-standing dispute over agricultural products.

    Canadian government: 'Very optimistic' trade war might be averted with U.S.