High-tech border pass raises alarm
Local News - Friday, July 29, 2005 @ 07:00
http://www.thewhig.com/webapp/sitepages/content.asp?contentID=119603&catname
=Local+News

By Jennifer Pritchett

Whig-Standard Staff Writer

Kingston¹s closest U.S. Border crossing will employ high-tech radio
frequency technology to monitor visitors from other countries who want to
enter the States from Canada ­ a move that alarms both a Kingston privacy
expert and an immigration specialist.

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security said this week that the crossing
between Lansdowne and Alexandria Bay, N.Y., will be one of three Canada-U.S.
land borders to require non-Canadians to carry wireless devices as part of a
pilot project.

Travellers will be required to carry the devices as of Aug. 4.

The technology is part of US-VISIT, a billion-dollar anti-terrorism
initiative launched last December that has kept about 700 criminals,
including one posing as a Canadian, out of the States.

US-VISIT uses biometric information from photos and fingerprints taken from
non-Canadians at border crossings to track residents from other countries
who enter the U.S.

Canadian citizens are the only people in the world exempt from US-VISIT.

Travellers required to use the technology include landed immigrants living
in Canada, Canadian citizens who are either engaged to a U.S. citizen or who
have applied for a special business visa.

They¹ll have to carry the wireless devices as a way for border guards to
access the electronic information stored inside a document about the size of
a large index card.

Visitors to the U.S. will get the card the first time they cross the border
and will be required the carry the document on subsequent crossings to and
from the States.

Border guards will be able to access the information electronically from 12
metres away to enable those carrying the devices to be processed more
quickly.


Two other border crossings between Surrey, B.C., and Blaine, Wash., will
also be implementing the technology as part of the pilot project.

Kimberly Weissman, spokeswoman for the US-VISIT program at the U.S.
Department of Homeland Security told The Whig-Standard yesterday that the
new devices can¹t be tracked outside the border crossing area.

³It has a range of 10 to 15 metres,² she said.

³The UHF frequency that we¹ve chosen makes it impossible to locate a
specific person.²

But the use of the wireless technology raises alarm bells for Queen¹s
University law professor and privacy expert Art Cockfield.

³It¹s intrusive and these are worrisome developments,² he said.

³Often these technologies are introduced in a fairly minor form and then the
technology is extended.What would be very troubling to me would be the
tracking of visitors after they¹ve crossed the border.²

Cockfield, who¹s part of a Queen¹s research group called the Globalization
of Personal Data Team, said he¹s so alarmed by these new devices that his
team will likely investigate them further after learning about them
yesterday.

Though the new devices don¹t violate Canadian law, because visitors are
under the jurisdiction of American law once inside the U.S., Cockfield said
their use raises disturbing questions about how the technology may be used
in the future.

³If I¹m close to the border and still on Canadian ground and a U.S. customs
guard is scanning me and finding out personal information about me, that
actually might be a violation of Canadian law because they¹re collecting
information on a Canadian resident who is still in Canada,² Cockfield said.

He said the devices smack of a ³Martha Stewart-like prison tracking device.²

³It¹s one thing to have a police officer approach you and ask for your
identification, but it¹s another thing for somebody sitting in an office
somewhere in Washington to track all your movements through a satellite
signal,² he said.

³It¹s in the realm of possibilities.²

He said the devices move the world closer to a total surveillance society.

³It certainly tracks you as you approach the border and as you cross the
border,² he said.

³If we think we¹re subject to government surveillance, that immediately
changes our behaviour,² he said. ³If you want to swear about Bush, you might
hold yourself back. It inhibits political dissent because if we think the
government is watching us, we¹ll be less likely to call a town hall meeting
to protest something we¹re upset about.²

Cockfield, who just moved back to Canada from a seven-year stint teaching in
Texas, also believes the devices will result in less cross-border traffic.

³I try not to go as frequently as usual because of these border hassles, and
I¹m white and I¹m a Canadian citizen,² he said. ³If I was non-white and a
landed immigrant, I would hesitate to a greater extent.²

He said the initiative will have a long-term, negative impact on Canada-U.S.
relations.

³The flows of people [across the border] bring about ties and understanding
between the two countries,² he said. ³If we inhibit those flows, then maybe
it will actually harm the security of the U.S. We will be less trusting of
the Americans.²

Sam Laldin of Kingston and District Immigrant Services also agrees that
requiring non-Canadians to carry such electronic devices may deter some
people from travelling to the U.S.

³If I don¹t have to, I will avoid going there,² he said.

Laldin, who came to Canada from Pakistan in 1967, said a lot has changed
since he became a Canadian citizen in 1970.

Laldin said this latest security step will affect hundreds of people living
in Kingston, many of whom use the Lansdowne border crossing when they travel
to the U.S.

Last year alone, Kingston District Immigrant Services provided assistance to
roughly 1,200 people from 35 countries.

Laldin said the devices open the door to the possibility of the American
government tracking people and gathering intelligence about them.

³I kind of feel uncomfortable because I don¹t know what that device is doing
and I don¹t know where that device is reporting,² he said. ³Although they
say it will expedite your entry through the border, it may be doing
something else, too.²

While he understands that extra measures may need to be taken to ensure that
non-Canadians entering the U.S. have the proper documentation, he doesn¹t
agree with the use of the electronic devices.

³The flip side of all this is the security and safety of the country and the
people living in the country and where to draw the line ­ it¹s a difficult
thing,² he said.

³I think they could do everything they need to do at the border crossing
instead of giving people something to carry with them,² he said.

³My nephew is a Canadian medical doctor and each time he crosses back and
forth, they fingerprint him, which is fine if that¹s the law they want.
People come prepared and they know they¹ll be fingerprinted.

³But to carry a device is something I personally don¹t think I would want to
do.²

­ With a file from Whig-Standard News Services 



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