Union ‘disappointed’ as feds fund outside staff to guard immigration holding centres
OTTAWA — The union representing Canada Border Services Agency workers says it’s disappointed by the federal government’s decision to provide funding for the agency to hire private sector guards on contract for immigration holding centres, arguing the work should be done by federal staff.
The government’s spring economic update listed $238 million in funding for the CBSA to bring in guards with higher security training at the centres, with $153 million of that money to come from existing departmental resources.
There are four immigration detention facilities across Canada in Surrey, B.C., Toronto, Laval, Que., and Sainte-Anne-des-Plaines, Que.
Luke Reimer, a spokesperson for the CBSA, said in an email that funding is not for additional guard resources but to maintain uninterrupted service as guards’ contracts expire.
