The international border between Canada and the United States has inherited a different kind of priority since the attacks of September 11, 2001. Four geographically distinct corridors or “gateways”
What’s just as important to consider are the different types of U.S. Canadian users. “Five types of users predominate,”
One contentious issue is that borderland communities have little or no channel for regular input on key policy issues. Regional differences are often minimized or even overlooked by “one border” rules and programs. “Some categories of U.S. border users have seen their needs addressed, but overall the picture is less positive, and a balance between security and prosperity is lacking,” Rabinowitz says. All too frequently, “one border” rules falsely equate U.S-Canadian border conditions with those of the more challenging U.S - Mexican border.
A complicating factor is the current recession. The auto industry has been struck with particular force and this industry remains critical to U.S. - Canada trade. “Without a bi-national integration of North American manufacturing, the economy of not only these two countries but the global economy continues to suffer,” Rabinowitz explains.
Rabinowitz advocates several initiatives that may prove conducive to achieving the necessary balance. “It’s important to publicly adopt a two-speed approach to the Canadian and Mexican borders,” he stresses, “while emulating the 30-point U.S. - Canada Smart Border Action Plan on a local level.”
Stewart Rabinowitz is President of Rabinowitz & Rabinowitz, P.C., a Dallas based Immigration Law Firm (http: //www. rabinowitzrabinowitz.com)
