2024 Year in review by CBSA

 

Dec. 10, 2024

Global Korean Post

 

 The Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) is Canada’s first line of defence at 1,200 ports of entry across the country. Day in and day out, approximately 8,500 frontline employees play a crucial role protecting our communities by preventing illegal goods and inadmissible people from entering Canada. Keeping Canada safe is keeping North America safe.

Between January 1 and October 31, 2024, the CBSA seized more dangerous drugs and firearms, and intercepted more stolen vehicles than in 2023, while processing 4.5 million commercial trucks and welcoming over 80.5 million travellers.

With the collaboration of our partners, including the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) and other Canadian police agencies, provincial and territorial governments, U.S. Customs and Border Protection, U.S. Homeland Security Investigations, the United States Coast Guard, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, and the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, the CBSA protects our communities by preventing the entry of harmful goods and people. In 2024, CBSA border services officers oversaw a daily flow of about 400,000 people and billions of dollars in goods and services crossing the land border between Canada and the U.S.

Between January 1 and October 31, 2024, the CBSA:

  • Made approximately 7,700 weapons and firearms seizures at ports of entry, which kept more than 15,600 weapons and 850 firearms off our streets (that is 50 more firearms than what had been seized at this time last year). Of those, 1,274 prohibited weapons and 750 firearms were seized coming from the U.S.
    • In addition to the firearms seized at ports of entry, CBSA investigators seized firearms and prohibited firearms parts in Canada during search warrants conducted as part of firearms smuggling investigations.
  • Seized over 25,600 kg of illegal drugs (both inbound and outbound). We also intercepted over 15,000 kg of cannabis and 547,000 kg of undeclared tobacco preventing millions of dollars in revenue evasion and combatting organized crime. Of our total illegal drug seizures, we stopped:
    • 9 kg of fentanyl, an increase of 775% from the same period in 2023, of which 4.1 kg was intercepted outbound before it could be smuggled towards the Netherlands. Canada is committed to working with international partners to address the global fentanyl crisis.
    • 3,955 kg of cocaine, an increase of 168% from the same period in 2023
    • 37 kg of heroin
    • 21,457 kg of other drugs, narcotics and precursor chemicals
    • 237 kg of other opioids (including opium, methadone, morphine and morphine base)
  • Conducted more than 28,600 searches by Detector Dog Service Teams, intercepting over 17,000 high-risk food, plant and animal products, drugs, firearms and currency.
  • Issued nearly 2,500 penalties totalling $2,136,200 for food, plant and animal import violations.
  • Intercepted 2,070 stolen vehicles before they were shipped abroad, almost 500 more than last year. Police across Canada lead investigations into vehicle theft, and the CBSA acts on 100% of referrals from them and on our own intelligence to stop stolen vehicles from leaving the country.
  • Reunited 26 missing or abducted children with their parents or legal guardians as part of the Our Missing Children Program, double the 2023 number. Since the program was created in 1986, the CBSA has helped reunite 2,054 missing children with their loved ones.
  • Identified almost 34,000 foreign nationals seeking to enter Canada at a port of entry along the land border with the U.S. whom our officers believed to be inadmissible. This has increased about 30% from 25,500 in 2023.
  • Removed over 14,000 foreign nationals from Canada for violating the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act (IRPA). Of these, more than 4,100 inadmissible foreign nationals were returned to the U.S. and about 460 were U.S. nationals.
  • Completed security screenings for over 113,000 asylum claimants.
  • Updated the Immigration and Refugee Protection Regulations with regulatory amendments to improve processing efficiency at the border and enhance public safety. The change allows a Minister’s Delegate to issue a removal order directly at the port of entry for straightforward transborder criminal offences, such as carrying a concealed weapon, smuggling drugs or the unauthorized possession of a firearm.
  • Completed national security screening for more than 34,700 permanent or temporary resident applicants, a 10% increase from the previous year. In about 775 of these cases, we identified reasonable grounds to believe the individuals were inadmissible on grounds of security, human or international rights violations, or organized crime and recommended that Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada not grant a visa.
  • Intervened in approximately 9,100 cases to recommend that airlines not allow a passenger to board a flight to Canada based on concerns over the validity of their travel documents. For the same period in 2023, the CBSA intervened in approximately 8,700 cases.
  • Amended and expanded the Iran designation which outlines the measures holding Iranian regime senior-officials accountable for their engagement in terrorism and systematic and gross human rights violations. Since the implementation of the designation of Iran pursuant to 35(1)(b) of IRPA, 16 cases have been referred to admissibility hearings by the CBSA. Of those, 9 have been either scheduled, opened, or completed to date. Among the completed cases, 2 are awaiting a decision from the Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada, 2 have been found inadmissible.
  • Established a partnership with Correctional Service Canada for the temporary use of the Regional Reception Centre located in Sainte-Anne-des-Plaines, Quebec, to house a small number of high-risk immigration detainees. This location will be used to detain adult males who present a significant risk to public safety.






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