As immigration debate heats up, Quebec road still ground zero for asylum seekers
The flow of asylum seekers using Roxham Road has slowed slightly, but locals like Susan Heller who live near the country’s busiest illegal crossing know that can change in a hurry.
Heller’s farm in southwestern Quebec is not far from the ditch at the U.S. border that has drawn international attention with thousands of crossings in the past two years. She volunteers as part of Bridges not Borders, a group of locals who’ve been calling attention to the migrants’ plight.
Every Sunday, a few members of the group head to the American side of the border in Champlain, N.Y. to hand out water in the summer and warm clothes in the winter to the dozen or so asylum seekers crossing on foot. They greet the taxis and shuttle buses dropping the migrants off before they cross the border and disappear into a temporary building the RCMP built this year on the Canadian side. An American counterpart covers the other six days of the week.
“We have, let’s say, half a minute to say ‘Welcome!’ ” said Heller, who has lived on Roxham Road for 51 years, about a kilometre from the border. “They are very stressed because this is the last hurdle before they get to Canada, so they’re really not listening to you …. We mostly say to them, they’re going to be okay.”


