Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Pilot project signals progress in Nexus impasse

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Nov, 2022 11:10 AM
  • Pilot project signals progress in Nexus impasse

WASHINGTON - There's a glimmer of hope in the ongoing impasse between Canada and the United States over the Nexus fast-traveller program.

The Canada Border Services Agency says the two countries are exploring "shorter-term measures" to shrink a backlog of applications.

At the Thousand Islands crossing between Ontario and New York, in-person Nexus interviews are being conducted separately by U.S. and Canadian agents on opposite sides of the border.

Spokeswoman Rebecca Purdy says the pilot project, which began in late September, allows applicants to be interviewed on the Canadian side before entering the U.S. to meet with Customs and Border Protection officers.

The rest of Canada's enrolment centres, where agents from both countries would normally interview applicants together in person, remain closed due to a lack of U.S. personnel.

Purdy says the project could be expanded to include additional border crossings where demand is highest and the two agencies have the capacity to implement it.

She says 49,482 new, renewed or replacement Nexus cards were issued between Oct. 6 and Nov. 5.

"Canada and the U.S. continue discussions about the reopening of Canadian enrolment centres and are pursuing solutions to address the current backlog," Purdy said in a statement.

While Nexus enrolment centres in the U.S. have been open since April, most of the centres in Canada have remained closed since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020.

That's because Customs and Border Protection won't send U.S. agents to staff them unless they get the same measure of legal protection agents have at existing ports of entry.

"Both Canada and the U.S. remain committed to a binational Nexus program that is accessible and expedites passage of low-risk members," Purdy said.

She confirmed that senior officials from the two agencies met in person earlier this month to discuss "options for shorter-term measures that continue to increase the number of people being issued new or renewed Nexus cards each month."

The pilot project is reminiscent of a proposal floated around the same time by Scotty Greenwood, chief executive of the Canadian American Business Council, who has been aggressively pushing for a resolution.

The council has launched a public awareness campaign at savenexus.ca that encourages Canadians to pressure their members of Parliament to reopen the enrolment centres.

The site has generated more than 1,500 emails so far, said Greenwood, who urged both agencies to be more transparent about their efforts to date.

"It's important, in my judgment, to be more forthcoming about what the next steps are," she said.

"(People fear) Nexus is hanging by a thread, and they have no idea that it's getting any better; no one has any idea how this is going to go … this is not an issue that's going to go away."

MORE National ARTICLES

Woman found with gunshot wounds in Downtown Eastside: VPD

Woman found with gunshot wounds in Downtown Eastside: VPD
Officers discovered the injured 39-year-old near Main Street and East Cordova just before 1 a.m., after she approached a passerby and asked for help. When officers arrived, they found the victim badly injured. VPD provided immediate first aid to the woman, who was taken to hospital and is now receiving treatment for serious injuries.

Woman found with gunshot wounds in Downtown Eastside: VPD

More people attached to language than Canada: poll

More people attached to language than Canada: poll
The survey, which was conducted by Leger for the Association for Canadian Studies, found 88 per cent of respondents reported a strong sense of attachment to their primary language, whereas 85 per cent reported the same for Canada.

More people attached to language than Canada: poll

Man arrested after exposing himself to hikers at Lynn Canyon Park

Man arrested after exposing himself to hikers at Lynn Canyon Park
The man, who is in his 30’s and is a resident of Delta, was subsequently released on conditions that include not to attend Lynn Canyon Park. The Mounties are now appealing to that person to come forward and provide information about what they witnessed.

Man arrested after exposing himself to hikers at Lynn Canyon Park

Cyclist in hospital after a motor vehicle collision

Cyclist in hospital after a motor vehicle collision
On Tuesday, August 9th at approximately 1:59 p.m., Surrey RCMP attended to the scene of a cyclist struck by a work van in the 9700-block of 120 Street. Via release, the Mounties say the cyclist sustained serious injuries and was transported to hospital. 

Cyclist in hospital after a motor vehicle collision

Snowbird jets grounded as accident investigated

Snowbird jets grounded as accident investigated
The decision to ground the planes comes after a crash of one of the jets on Aug. 2 at the airport in Fort St. John, B.C. No one was hurt when the pilot made a hard landing and the Air Force says the cause of the accident remains under investigation.

Snowbird jets grounded as accident investigated

IHIT identifies Surrey taxi shooting passenger as David Chavez-Jara

IHIT identifies Surrey taxi shooting passenger as David Chavez-Jara
Mounties said the passenger who died has been identified as a 30 year old David Chavez-Jara of Surrey. Chavez-Jara was well known to police and was recently convicted on Possession for the Purpose of Trafficking. 

IHIT identifies Surrey taxi shooting passenger as David Chavez-Jara