Monday, February 2, 2026
ADVT 
National

Canada Border Services Agency Concurs With End Of Transit Police Agreement

The Canadian Press, 22 Feb, 2015 02:15 PM
    VANCOUVER — A Canada Border Services Agency spokeswoman says the agency agrees there is no need to continue with a memorandum of understanding with Metro Vancouver Transit Police.
     
    Jennifer Bourque says the intent of the agreement was meant to facilitate the placement of a CBSA officer in Transit Police offices in order to help with information sharing.
     
    But she says since information sharing is covered under existing privacy legislation, CBSA did not see the need to have an officer embedded with Transit Police and the memorandum was never used.
     
    Transit Police spokeswoman Anne Drennan announced the end of the agreement on Friday, and she also said that officers would no longer arrest undocumented migrants unless they were wanted on an outstanding warrant.
     
    The decision follows the death of Lucia Vega Jimenez (HE'-MEN'-ez), a Mexican woman who hanged herself in a holding facility below Vancouver's airport in December 2013, after Transit Police stopped her for fare evasion and called CBSA.
     
    Bourque says while the agency cannot comment on changes that Transit Police makes to its internal policies, CBSA will continue to act on tips it receives from any of its enforcement partners.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Five things to know about the Supreme Court's assisted dying ruling

    Five things to know about the Supreme Court's assisted dying ruling
    OTTAWA — The Supreme Court of Canada has unanimously overturned its own 1993 decision and struck down a ban on providing a doctor-assisted death to mentally competent but suffering and "irremediable" patients. Here are five things to know about the decision.

    Five things to know about the Supreme Court's assisted dying ruling

    RCMP death prompts Edmonton police to question use of officers at bail hearings

    RCMP death prompts Edmonton police to question use of officers at bail hearings
    EDMONTON — The fatal shooting of a Mountie by a man who was out on bail has prompted Edmonton police to suggest officers should not be handling bail hearings.

    RCMP death prompts Edmonton police to question use of officers at bail hearings

    $50M in the kitty: Alberta man on food run for cat finds out he won lottery

    $50M in the kitty: Alberta man on food run for cat finds out he won lottery
    ST. ALBERT, Alta. — There will be no shortage of kibble in the home of an Alberta man who was on a food run for his cat when he discovered he'd won a $50-million lottery prize.

    $50M in the kitty: Alberta man on food run for cat finds out he won lottery

    Toronto's measles count rises to six with report of another infected adult

    Toronto's measles count rises to six with report of another infected adult
    TORONTO — Public health officials in Toronto say the city's measles count has risen to six with the diagnosis of another adult patient.

    Toronto's measles count rises to six with report of another infected adult

    Avian Influenza Hits Another Backyard Coop In B.C.: Industry Group

    Avian Influenza Hits Another Backyard Coop In B.C.: Industry Group
    An outbreak that began last December hit 11 commercial chicken and turkey farms in Abbotsford, Chilliwack and Langley, as well as a backyard coop in Langley.

    Avian Influenza Hits Another Backyard Coop In B.C.: Industry Group

    Five Arrested In 2012 Prince George, B.C., Murder After Rigorous Probe

    Five Arrested In 2012 Prince George, B.C., Murder After Rigorous Probe
    PRINCE GEORGE, B.C. — Mounties have arrested five people in the 2012 murder of a 22-year-old man, after a lengthy probe involving hundreds of officers in B.C. and Alberta.

    Five Arrested In 2012 Prince George, B.C., Murder After Rigorous Probe