There have been preclearance procedures in place at a
few certain airports in both Canada and the U.S. for a long while. Some U.S. officers in Canadian airports, providing preclearance for particular flights to certain U.S. destinations (as I previously noted, my first experience with this was 17 years ago). Some Canadian officials in U.S. airpots providing preclearance for particular flights to certain Canadian destinations.
As the CBSA site linked by
torontosm overtly states:
there are 39 locations abroad where CBSA officers provide services.
This has nothing to do with what is encountered in any airport outside the U.S. or Canada, nor with what is encountered at most U.S. or Canadian airports, international or otherwise.
To be filed in the category of observations by those who have only ever seen a giraffe in a zoo, never in the wild, and conclude reports about giraffes in the wild must be false:
canvis2006 said:
only encountered private security contractors in foreign countries doing "document checks" for flights to Canada.
Did not ever see anyone with CBSA badge or uniform or even any hint.
They check everyone's docs, not just PR's and that has been the procedure for as long as i remember.
I've never seen Canadian CBSA's preclearance anywhere in usa or elsewhere. It would be too expensive as well.
In most places Canadian diplomatic staff can easily provide checks at airports (such as consular, immigration officers posted abroad).
sistemc said:
I never saw a CBSA officer on any of the airport outside the Canada. And I am flying to Canada from Europe or USA.
What you have now are Air Canada ground crew employees asking passengers for documents and their status before boarding.
Here is a clue: there is a lot in the world you have not seen and indeed never will see. It is a big world, full of all sorts of stuff some of which is more or less unusual. What you do not see does not mean it does not exist (unless one's philosophical perspective is that of a solipsist, or such).
In any event, the preclearance procedure has been operating both sides of the U.S. and Canadian border for a long while. It is limited to a very few locations. It facilitates offering direct flights to smaller cities without the need to route the flights through the respective international airports (in the destination country) with in-place border control.
The March 2015 agreement between the U.S. and the Harper government
expanded and in other respects provided for more
formalized procedures, including these preclearance procedures at certain airports. As the Harper government was wont to do, however, the agreement entered into went beyond what Canadian law overtly provides for. Bill C-23 is among many measures the current government has been compelled to do in the effort to clean-up and fix a lot of the mess created by the Harper government.
In other words, these preclearance procedures
are NOT new, but Bill C-23 is an effort to codify the regulation of these procedures.
And, these provisions go beyond the scope of those preclearance procedures which have been in place for some time, such as those provisions which will allow for PRs to be denied entry into Canada if determined to be inadmissible
despite sections 19(2) and 27(1) in IRPA which essentially give PRs a statutory right to enter Canada.
Note: contrary to what is stated in the CBC article, about the likelihood that Bill C-23 will be adopted and become law, I would suggest that this is far from a sure-bet and given the new American Administration, a gold-gilded-buffoon at the head and a mean-spirited goon apparently calling a lot of the shots, it is at least an open question whether this bill will advance much through the legislative process. It is a long way from being enacted.