On the eve of the U.S. homeland security secretary’s visit to Canada, refugee advocates worry Ottawa could ask the Americans to beef up border enforcement to curb the flow of asylum-seekers coming into the country.

The surge of illegal crossings in recent months is expected to be a key issue on the agenda between Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale and U.S. Secretary John Kelly.

“They have done it in the past and started arresting people coming up at the border. Canadian officials can ask the Americans to boost enforcement,” said Janet Dench of the Canadian Council for Refugees. “It would be really disturbing if Canada is going to push the U.S. to do that.”

The Department of Homeland Security has yet to officially announce Kelly’s trip, but Canadian cabinet minister Marc Garneau has told the media it could be as early as Friday. The U.S. Embassy in Ottawa would not confirm the meeting.

In the first two months of 2017, about 1,700 refugee claims were filed at the land border across the country, including asylum-seekers who entered outside an official port of entry, which officials call “irregular” crossings, and those who crossed legally at a border enforcement station.

RELATED:

Canada’s refugee acceptance rate highest in four years

Quebec, which has seen the highest number of irregular crossings across Canada so far this year, has already received 1,087 land-border claims. That’s 43 per cent of the total for all of 2016.

Last year, the province received 2,527 land-border claims, up sharply from 1,054 in 2015 and 881 in 2014.

Canada?s public safety minister said on Monday the government was examining a revised order that halts new U.S. visas for people from six Muslim-majority countries. Ralph Goodale said it appears that Canadian citizens will be unaffected.

On Tuesday, Goodale said the government is working on contingency plans should the situation along the border change. Contingencies being considered include the possibility of a larger number of migrants attempting the crossing as the weather improves and threats to the safety of migrants in case of flooding along the Red River near Emerson, Manitoba, another hot spot for irregular crossings.

“We are examining all of that, the physical circumstances, the forces or factors that might pull that migration (away) and others that might push it (toward Canada). I mean all of that is being carefully analyzed,” Goodale said.

“As the circumstances evolve, we want to make sure that we’ve thought it through in advance and we have ourselves in a position to deal with it effectively.”

Goodale would not comment on what options are under consideration by officials on both sides of the border to slow down the refugee inflow via the U.S.

“It is clearly affecting Canada as the migrants come across the border. We need to have a very good co-operative seamless arrangement with the U.S. to fully appreciate where the flow began and all of the factors,” he said.

“The Americans have indicated they are equally interested in fully getting the facts and understanding the genesis of this and we will work collaboratively and seamlessly with them to make sure the management of the situation is as good as it can possibly be.”

Asylum-seekers who crossed through an unguarded section of the Canada-U.S. border don’t fall under the domain of the Safe Third Country Agreement, which restricts refugees to seeking asylum in the country of their arrival.

Once they are in Canada, they become the country’s responsibility and the Immigration and Refugee Board must grant them a fair hearing.

To slow down irregular crossings, experts say, one option is for Canadian officials to ask their U.S. counterparts to intercept prospective refugees before they land on Canadian soil.

Loading... Loading... Loading... Loading... Loading... Loading...

Another option at Ottawa’s disposal, said Quebec immigration lawyer Mitchell Goldberg, is using a provision in the immigration laws introduced by the former Conservative government to allow the public safety minister to declare certain groups of refugees, such as irregular border crossers, “designated foreign nationals.”

That designation gives border enforcement officials the authority to detain the asylum-seekers, expedite the processing of their claims, prohibit their families from joining them and bar them from becoming permanent residents for five years even if their asylum claim is successful, Goldberg said.

“This won’t stop people from coming, but it allows Canadian officials to detain without reasons, so they face being locked up in the U.S. versus being locked up in Canada,” said Goldberg, president of the Canadian Association of Refugee Lawyers.

“The Liberals were very clear in (favouring) cancelling that scheme when they were in opposition. If they are going to designate these foreign nationals, it’s going to blow up their own moral authority.”