Monday, 27 February 2017

Late Reflection



Good Evening Gentle Readers

This reflection is well a day or two late because I got too caught up in what I was doing…..

Doesn’t that just fit perfectly?


Good Enough


Jesus said to his disciples:
"No one can serve two masters.
He will either hate one and love the other,
or be devoted to one and despise the other.
You cannot serve God and mammon.

"Therefore I tell you, do not worry about your life,
what you will eat or drink,
or about your body, what you will wear.
Is not life more than food and the body more than clothing?
Look at the birds in the sky;
they do not sow or reap, they gather nothing into barns,
yet your heavenly Father feeds them.
Are not you more important than they?

Can any of you by worrying add a single moment to your life-span?
Why are you anxious about clothes?
Learn from the way the wild flowers grow.
They do not work or spin.
But I tell you that not even Solomon in all his splendor
was clothed like one of them.
If God so clothes the grass of the field,
which grows today and is thrown into the oven tomorrow,
will he not much more provide for you, O you of little faith?

So do not worry and say, 'What are we to eat?'
or 'What are we to drink?'or 'What are we to wear?'
All these things the pagans seek.
Your heavenly Father knows that you need them all.
But seek first the kingdom of God and his righteousness,
and all these things will be given you besides.
Do not worry about tomorrow; tomorrow will take care of itself.
Sufficient for a day is its own evil."

This Sunday's Gospel reading comes from the part of the Sermon on the Mount where Jesus gives advice on how to live in the holiness that he has been teaching and modeling. Interestingly, it follows the same guidelines that Jesus set forth in the "Our Father" prayer, starting with "give us this day our daily bread".

Both the prayer and the sermon focus our attention on trusting God for our daily needs.
In every temptation, in every challenge, and in every difficulty, either we choose to trust God or else we trust our limited understanding of the situation and choose the ways of the world. We cannot do both at the same time, although we might fool ourselves into believing that we can keep one foot in heaven while the other foot walks the paths of the world. (Try picturing that!)

The word "mammon" comes from the Aramaic word for "wealth" or "property." It's been said that someone once prayed, "Give us this day our daily bread" and God replied, "You already have your bread and other people's bread, too." What do we have in storage that someone else needs? We store up for the future while others barely survive as they lack what we have in abundance. It feels dangerous to give away what we've stored up; someday we might need it more than they do!

If that's our thinking, we're not trusting God to take care of us. We are living under the assumption that he won't be as generous with us as we are with others.

That's why Jesus went on to say, "You worry too much!" We should focus not on what worries us but on how good God is.

Jesus said, "God loves you so much, he will take care of you! If you seek first God's kingdom and handle daily life God's way, you'll have everything you need."


Worry is a sin when it takes our eyes off of Jesus. Worry is evil when it restrains us from giving to others what Jesus wants to give them through us.

Monday, 20 February 2017

Another Homeless Death on Toronto Streets

Good Morning Gentle Readers

People are planning a memorial outside the Mayor's downtown luxury condo.

Andrea Huston 
At the same time as Toronto councillors were debating a budget that many are calling harmful to the cities most vulnerable, a homeless man died of a drug overdose soon after leaving a downtown shelter that was over capacity.
A memorial is planned for today, February 19, outside Mayor John Tory’s condo building at 1 Bedford at Bloor Street, just outside St. George Station from 5 p.m. to 6 p.m.

The 28-year-old homeless Indigenous man went to St Felix Centre, one of the two 24-hour warming centres, at around 6 p.m. February 15, Toronto Street nurse and homeless advocate Cathy Crowe told Torontoist.
“They were full, but invited him in for food. They offered to put him on the waiting list or send him to St. Lawrence Community Centre warming centre. That’s the one I call the ‘secret warming centre’ because doors are locked all night. It’s not advertised, or on the City website. I’ve been fighting with the City all winter on it,” Crowe says.
City News reports that the shelter was 10 people over capacity when the man arrived. He was offered a referral to another location, but declined.
After being turned away, the man suffered a fatal overdose in a nearby restaurant washroom. Police confirmed that the heroin the man had consumed was believed to be laced with the drug fentanyl, which has been connected to a surge of deaths among intravenous drug users.
“It is time for us to wake up to the fact that people are dying on our streets from overdoses and a lack of sufficient housing,” Councillor Joe Cressy told City News. “It shows our shelter system is over capacity today and we are really struggling.”

Cressy’s motion to save front-line shelter staff failed. City Council passed the 2017 budget, but not before accidentally unbalancing it. and voting to make up the shortfall with reserves.
Some councillors were quick to point out that $2 million was easily found to patch a hole of Council’s own creation (as a result of a last-minute vote to preserve street sweeping services), but not half as much to maintain service levels at homeless shelters across the city.
A spokesperson from the mayor’s office described the recent death as a “tragic circumstance” and told the Star that Mayor Tory has been “very vocal about the dangers of fentanyl” and is working to reduce the impact of the deadly drug.
“City staffs are investigating, and we will be asking for a full report once all the facts are known,” the spokesperson said.
Parkdale-High Park Councillor Gord Perks is calling the 2017 budget the most unfair he’s ever seen. “We’re literally taking money away from the poorest to keep property taxes low for people who are wealthy,” Perks told Now Magazine. “It’s reverse Robin Hood.”



Some of the comments on this news story

The large warm and cozy food court at College Park is accessible 24-hours yet homeless people are barred from sitting there. They should be forced to allow people to seek shelter there during bouts of extreme temperatures.


F#*k shelters. Build housing


Sunday, 19 February 2017

A Map for the Journey

Good Morning Gentle Readers

I am a flawed, weak, person, a person with a bad temper a less than generous heart and all of the human failings that we all have but that being said I am working on that. As a Catholic and as a Christian we are all called to holiness, we are not perfect but we are a people walking on a road, it might be a long road but we are walking on it, and we are not alone in this journey. As well we are blessed; instead of walking blindly on this journey we were given a really good map. We are all God’s chosen people, all chosen to be with him, all chosen to be like him.

Today’s readings explain the basis of Jewish and Christian morality, the holiness of the loving, merciful and compassionate One God. God’s chosen people were, and are, expected to be holy people sharing in God’s holiness by embodying His love, mercy and forgiveness. Hence, the first reading, taken from the book of Leviticus, gives the holiness code: “Be holy, for I the Lord, your God, am holy.” It also gives us the way to share God’s holiness:  “Love your neighbor as yourself.” 

The Responsorial Psalm (Ps 103) challenges us to be like our God – kind, merciful and forgiving. In the second reading St. Paul gives us an additional reason to be holy. We are to keep our bodies holy because we are the temples of the Holy Spirit, and the Holy Spirit lives in us. In the Gospel passages taken from the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus condemns even the mild form of the “Law of the Talion, ( an Eye for an Eye),” the Babylonian tribal law of restricted retaliation which Moses passed on to Israel. In its place, Jesus gives his new law of love, grace, forgiveness, reconciliation and no retaliation. For Jesus, retaliation, or even limited vengeance, has no place in the Christian life, even though graceful acceptance of an offense requires great strength, discipline of character as well as strengthening by God’s grace. The second part of today’s Gospel passage is the central part of the Sermon on the Mount. It presents the Christian ethic of personal relationships: love one’s neighbors and forgive one’s enemies. It tells us that what makes Christians different is the grace with which they treat others with loving kindness and mercy, even if they don’t deserve it. We are commanded to love our enemies as Jesus loves us, with agápe love, not because our enemies deserve our love, but because Jesus loves them so much that he died for them as He did for us. 

Saturday, 18 February 2017

Family Day


 Good Morning Gentle Readers

I have this weekend off like most people in Ontario it’s the Family day long weekend. So why is this important enough for a blog post well it goes like this…

Unlike a lot of people in Ontario I have a good job where the management understands that treating people well is a good thing. No one is saying that I have to go in this weekend or on the Monday to “make up” the time, no one is scheduling a surplus inventory count or some other project that would break up the weekend.

You would not believe how much this makes me like my management.

My plan is to really spend time with my family. To play with the big man, to make Cindy Lou laugh and to have a good time….

I love it…


I hope and pray you get a chance to spend some time with your family this weekend and I hope you enjoy it.


Take Care and God Bless


Good Enough

Monday, 13 February 2017

For My Son



In many years from now you might look at my blog and wonder what I was thinking….
Well you were one when I thought this

Love you my special dream

Take Care and God Bless

Good Enough


Dreamer’s Dreams

Tom Cochrane

If I was a sailor man
If I was lost at sea
I'd see your light shining there
Off the rocks, off the sand
That light would be all that I'd see
And if I was the king of the world
With all the world to set free
You'd be the one there to force my hand
To make a stand
Give me that sweet release

Those are the dreams that a
Dreamer Dreams
Those are the dreams
That he dreams
That he dreams
Fill you up so high
So high you wouldn't come down
Those are the dreamers dreams

If I could see in you
All the things you want me to
And if I could walk a mile in your shoes
An old cliche, anyway
But if you could just do the same
There's nothing we couldn't so
Surround you with a silver crown
Fill you up so high
So high you wouldn't come down
Those are the dreamers dreams

Those are the dreams That a Dreamer dreams
Those are the dreams
That he dreams
Fill you up so high
So high you won't come down
Those are the dreamers dreams

The Good Guys

Just a little post about the good guys…..

Take Care and God Bless

Good Enough

In his long battle against corporate America, the Rev. Michael Crosby of Milwaukee just won his biggest victory since Joe Camel ads stopped running 20 years ago.

The world's largest publicly traded oil company has agreed to appoint a climate change expert to its board of directors.

The move follows ExxonMobil CEO Rex Tillerson's move to the Trump administration as secretary of state, chosen by a president who has labeled global warming a hoax. And it comes after decades of fighting by Crosby, a Capuchin Franciscan friar who lives and works at St. Ben the Moor — the church perhaps best known for its meals feeding Milwaukee's hungry and homeless — at the corner of W. State and N. 10th streets near the Milwaukee County Jail.

Crosby has written 18 books on spirituality and theology, but he's perhaps best known for the pilgrimages he makes each year to annual shareholders meetings of large U.S. corporations.

He's been doing this since the early 1970s. Over his decades in this business, he's tried to convince corporations and their shareholders to make change for the good.

Investors should want their companies to do just that, he said. "By owning shares, people can challenge the companies to convert — to bring about good news for the poor and the planet. That's what we try to do with socially responsible investing."

Over the years, he's had a string of victories, along with coalitions of do-gooder shareholders who fought Big Tobacco for years.

In the late 1990s, Crosby shifted his focus to climate change when Exxon's CEO was denying the scientific evidence linking fossil fuels and rising carbon dioxide emissions.

He had a rocky, at times too personal, feud with Exxon CEO Lee Raymond, who during shareholder meetings belittled those with whom he disagreed, The Wall Street Journal reported in 2001.
But change has come to the oil company. The company stopped denying the scientific evidence linking human activities to climate change at a meeting attended by Crosby at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 2006.

But the company continued to rebuff a series of climate issues and activist shareholders, including Crosby, who has attended ExxonMobil shareholder meetings nearly every year for a generation.

For the past few years, Crosby — who leads the Seventh Generation Interfaith Coalition for Responsible Investment — has pushed a shareholder resolution seeking the appointment of a climate change expert to the board of directors. He's been joined at the shareholder meetings by other outspoken advocates, including Sister Patricia Daly of New Jersey, representing the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility, and the sustainability-focused shareholder advocates from Boston-based Ceres.

The company has argued that a board of directors needs people with a range of views and not someone knowledgeable in just one area.

“Not one person has any expertise on climate,” Crosby told shareholders at the 2016 shareholders meeting in May. “ExxonMobil has a chance to restore the public’s trust; it’s a time for conversion.”

But Crosby won't have to present the resolution again this year.

On Feb. 1, ExxonMobil appointed a climate change expert, Susan Avery, to its board of directors. An atmospheric scientist, she's the former president of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution.

"We've been at it for almost 20 years, and with ExxonMobil on this issue we really did have a breakthrough," Crosby said.

A Change in Tone

The changing of the guard to Tillerson, now the secretary of state, brought a change in tone — and a change in the stance toward climate change.

To be sure, Tillerson was still all about the fossil fuel business that ExxonMobil derives its revenue and profit from. As Tillerson has said, "We choose not to lose money on purpose."

But Tillerson's leadership was accompanied by growing acceptance that climate change poses risks to companies and nations — as well as investigations by news outlets showing that Exxon's own scientists were doing scenario-planning for a warming world.

The appointment of Avery to the board "is really significant," Daly said. "It's big."

"Many board members have been or are CEOs of companies and financial management firms who have long acknowledged climate risk, and have adjusted their business models because of it," said Daly. "Adding a board member with climate expertise is just a good business move for this company."

But clearly ExxonMobil's business model is focused on fossil fuels and remains so. Other 2017 shareholder resolutions will continue to push the oil company to assess climate risk and begin planning to avoid the worst effects of climate change. Crosby remains concerned about organizations that receive the company's support and advocate against policies that would address global warming.

ExxonMobil wouldn't acknowledge the shareholder resolution when it announced Avery's appointment to its board, but Crosby took heart that a representative of the company called him the very next morning after she was named and asked him to withdraw the resolution.

Alan Jeffers, an ExxonMobil spokesman, said the company wouldn't comment on matters involving the shareholder meeting because the proxy statement for this year's meeting hasn't been finalized.

"We are committed to effective communications and engagement with shareholders and meet regularly with many shareholders to inform them of the company’s position on various matters and to hear issues of importance to them," Jeffers said.

Tough but not cantankerous

Crosby’s gone head to head with CEOs for years but he’s not cantankerous. A gentle force for good, he brings to his role a combination of a dry sense of humor and a deeply felt passion that companies need to be doing right by the planet and its people.

“He’s creative, he’s stalwart, he’s so insightful. Of course he’s a lot of fun to work with. And he’s a dear, dear friend after many years,” said Daly.

He blends his training in theology with a master’s in economics to meet the business people using their own jargon.

“He tries to understand their business positions and tries to put it in business terms and create a business case for them to justify a difference in behavior,” said Frank Sherman, a retired chief executive who now works alongside Crosby on shareholder advocacy.

“He’s gained credibility because of his persistence over the years,” said Sherman. “His persistence and his faith-based lens that he comes at it with is authentic. That’s recognized by the company and by other companies. He’s been an advocate trying to get the tobacco companies to operate more ethically for longer than the Exxon engagement.”

“He’s put it in their terms but his motivation is for the common good. The common good in addressing all stakeholders is in the company’s financial best interest long term. Maybe not short term, but long term.”
Fighting a personal battle

Crosby's friends are hoping the ExxonMobil win isn't his final victory. He was diagnosed with cancer in the esophagus and abdomen during the last week of Advent.

So instead of joining his colleagues at shareholder conferences last week to discuss the 2017 proxy battles, he's been heading to Columbia-St. Mary's for daily treatment.

It's possible he may not see 2018. Sitting in his office at St. Ben's, Crosby says that while he's not rooting for death, he's fine with it.

Blood clots he sustained after a car crash years ago left him ready for death, a message he reaffirmed when he announced his diagnosis to friends and colleagues through the caringbridge.com site last month.

"When the doctor (following the car crash) told me I might die, my first reaction surprised me: 'That wouldn’t be too bad.' This led me to try to maintain the same attitude if I lived and if something like this would ever happen again," Crosby wrote. "A key element of this involved having no hard feelings in my heart against anyone. It seems this time has now arrived. So, while I am prepared for that day and hour (for which I’m not volunteering) I have no especial desire to postpone it. This gives me great peace."

Crosby's gotten plenty of prayers and well wishes, some of them from the tobacco and fossil fuel CEOs he's sparred with over the years.

"He's got a huge group praying for him," said Sherman.

Crosby, who's about to turn 76 this week, isn't fading away or giving up. He's got plenty of energy and has responded well to treatment. The side effects from chemotherapy aren't setting him back. So he's been back on his laptop, firing off ideas for new proxy resolutions.

Feeling stronger than he expected, Crosby's cogitating about opening a new front in his ongoing quest to get corporations to do the right thing. This time he's thinking about ensuring that broadcast media companies show strength in their commitment to accuracy and truth in an era of spin, "fake news" and media bullying.

He hopes to call on broadcast news outlets to create a board of ethicists to ensure that policies are in place to assure their reporting is accurate. And he'd like policies adopted to create on-air disclaimers for pundits and talk show hosts to "make sure that it is clear to the viewer that those are opinions and not necessarily facts."

"We've got to make sure the big media companies don't cave to intimidation," Crosby said. "They've got to show strength in the face of bullying."


Just so you know Brother Crosby…. I will be praying for you too

Take Care and God Bless

Good Enough

The Book Thief


 Good Afternoon Gentle Readers

Well I saw the movie “The Book Thief” today. I just loved it; I found it moving and beautiful. It has a message that is so important for us, for all of us young and old rich or poor live your life, live every moment of it because in the end that is what makes a life…..

Take Care and God Bless

Good Enough

Acts of..........



Good Morning Gentle Readers

I don’t often talk about my time as a soldier, it was a long time ago and a lifetime away but I did learn a few things, not the least of which was history and tactics. I know that when fighting an enemy you have to be sure of a few things, the most important of all is who they are. The second thing is do all that you can to keep them from having the ability to fight you, remove the resources they have and they will fall, and most importantly never, ever do anything that you have not planned out fully.

 “The supreme art of war is to subdue the enemy without fighting.” 

Sun Tzu, The Art of War

I came across this article and as I read it I heard my officers and instructors telling me over and over, don’t inspire your enemy, don’t give him a reason to want to fight you more than he already does….

Donald Trump Is Spreading Racism — Not Fighting Terrorism
Daniel Benjamin

Benjamin was Coordinator for Counter terrorism at the U.S. State Department and is director of The John Sloan Dickey Centre for International Understanding at Dartmouth College

Counter terrorism may seem like a complicated, murky business. But practitioners agree on a few simple rules. Among them:

1.      Be clear about who threatens you, and target them. Casting your net too widely creates new enemies.

2.     Build strong alliances. Terrorism is a global problem that requires a global solution; you need capable, like minded partners to collaborate on intelligence, law enforcement and military operations.

3.      Counter and undermine your enemies narrative. Don’t confirm it.

4.      Don’t drive away moderates; winning them over is key to defeating your enemies.

5.      Show efficiency and competence. Those qualities bolster deterrence.

 In composing and implementing its executive order “Protecting the Nation From Terrorist Entry into the United States,” Donald Trump’s White House has shown a disregard for — or ignorance of — these precepts that is breathtaking. Despite claims by the White House that this is about making Americans safe from terrorism, less than two weeks into the new administration, the United States has:


1.   Made the world’s 1.6 billion Muslims uncertain about the global superpower’s fundamental orientation toward them and their faith. This is a dramatic shift after successive Republican and Democratic administrations drew a clear line between a small group of extremists and ordinary believers.

2.   Prompted the parliament of Iraq — our partner, whose army is the primary ground force fighting ISIS — to approve a reciprocal ban  on Americans coming to Iraq and put Prime Minister  Haider al-Abadi in an impossible position.

3.  Given  ISIS propagandist's a windfall to work with — which they are exulting about — just    
      at the moment that the group is reeling from a series of major setbacks.

4.       Profoundly unsettled patriotic American Muslims — who provide as many as 40% of the tips that domestic counter terrorism authorities receive — and undercut their efforts to work with U.S. law enforcement to prevent radicalisation.


5.      Displayed perhaps the most shambolic performance of the Executive Branch since Hurricane Katrina. The White House blindsided the leadership of the Departments of Defence, Homeland Security and State by handing them an order that they had no time to evaluate or refine. Far less sweeping executive orders have historically required weeks or months of interagency consultation.

To put it bluntly: Trump’s Executive Order has nothing to do with counter terrorism.
The executive order was designed by people with no security background but a long history of being anti-immigrant: chief ideologist Steve Bannon, the former CEO of far-right conspiracy-theory mill Breibart News, and policy adviser Stephen Miller. It aims to signal that Trump is not deviating from his Islamophobic, anti-immigration, pro-white campaign. So far, it’s working. The nation is following along.

A Reuters/Ipsos poll shows that 49 percent of Americans support the executive order Nearly a third think it will make them safer. At the heart of that group are Trump voters. Political scientist Michael Tesler observed early on that Republicans who backed Trump were 30% more likely to believe that Muslims threatened the United States and 35% more likely to believe that most Muslims support ISIS than other Republican voters. As the unprecedented elevation of Bannon to a seat on the National Security Council demonstrates also shows, the Trump administration is determined to enthrone ideology instead of pragmatism or expertise.

The executive order aims to reap more than a quick political bonus, though. It seeks to fuse the fears of jihadism with anxieties over America’s demographic trajectory. The Trump White House wants us all to believe that our security interests require both reversing the “browning” of America and curbing the influx of foreigners who will make white Americans a minority in the nation by 2050. Woven in this is a view of  Islam as an unalterably hostile force — a perspective so ungrounded in history and theology that it mirrors the jihadi view of the U.S. and the West. Trump and Bannon are not promoting American security so much as fear and racism.

Recognizing the centrality of this anti-immigrant and anti-Muslim animus helps explain why the White House pushed the executive order in week one of the new administration, even though there was certainly no urgency from a counterterrorism perspective.

Our immigration systems work about as well as anyone could hope. Since 9/11, not a single death has been caused by terrorists  from the seven countries singled out the executive order — or anywhere else — entering the U.S. to carry out an attack. To get into the U.S., a visa applicant must be screened multiple times, including being checked against terabytes of intelligence and law-enforcement materials, biometric data and the like.

As for Syrian refugees, by the time they have finished their 18-24 month vetting process outside the country, we know more about them and their connections than we do about our President, his finances and his foreign partners and investors.

Throughout the campaign, Trump told Americans that our immigration system was failing to keep dangerous people out. On top of that falsehood, he has now piled another: The executive order, he says is “is not a Muslim ban… This is not about religion. This is about terror and keeping our country safe."

Nonsense.

Of course, not all Muslims are being banned. But consider this the thin edge of the wedge. The countries listed are on average 97 percent Muslim, and the sum of their populations is 219 million people. That amounts to the exclusion of a significant chunk of the Muslim world for a first step. Yes, it will be hard for Trump, Bannon and Co. to come up with a way to ban India’s 180 million Muslims. But it seems a good bet that if the executive order survives court challenges, other Muslim-majority countries will face similar treatment.Sebastian Gorka, a former Breitbart editor and now a deputy National Security Advisor, is already hinting as much.


Some will find this far-fetched. Perhaps it is. But making sense of a purported counter terrorism innovation that diminishes our security is no small challenge. Dealing with a cabal of conspiracy theorists requires us to master their dark arts and twisted thinking.

Sunday, 12 February 2017

There's No Place Like Emerson


Good Morning Gentle Readers

This is why I love Canada…..

Nope they are not tossed in jail, not tossed back out into the cold….

But we will open the community center for them….

Are people fleeing the fear of racism and bigotry, the culture of fear that is growing in the world by coming to Canada, the short answer is yes…..

We are a Country with its own share of problems but being driven by fear is not one of them I hope and pray. As Christians we have to open our hearts to the stranger and the alien, we have to say this is our brother, this is our sister regardless of their beliefs or race and the good people of Emerson have done that. These people crossed open countryside in winter in minus seventeen degree cold risking life and limb to find a place to just be allowed to live without fear, in my humble opinion I say let them in, let them stay, give them the home that all people need and deserve….

God Bless you Emerson, God Bless…

Take Care and God Bless

Good Enough




By Tessa Vanderhart and Austin Grabish



Emerson, Man., emergency workers helped at least 27 refugees who crossed the border Saturday morning. 
Refugees entering from the U.S. are walking through open farmers' fields to pass through the border into Manitoba near the town.
The town's emergency measures co-coordinator, Bill Spanjer, said they came in two groups. 
Emerson-Franklin Reeve Greg Janzen said local emergency crews were dispatched after two 911 calls were made Saturday in the wee hours of the morning.
The report said 27 asylum seekers were found in total. He said he's been told a bus dropped off one group of 16 people alone. 
"They're housing them all at customs," he said Saturday afternoon.
Janzen said there was at least one family that crossed the border with their children.
A group of five was located approximately six kilometers north of the customs office on Highway 75, and the larger group appears to have crossed at Noyes, Minn., he said. 
Both groups called 911 right after they crossed the border, and RCMP and the fire department responded. 
"These people basically call 911 as soon as they cross," he said. "It's not the locals who are calling 911, it's the actual asylum-seekers who are calling 911," Spanjer said. 
Spanjer said the municipality is waiting to hear from Canada Border Services Agency whether the community centre needs to be open to provide the refugees a place to stay. 
On Thursday, the border town of 671 held an emergency meeting with members of the Canada Border Services Agency and Mounties to talk about concerns over a recent surge of refugees passing through. 

"In the short term, you're not going to see any immediate change," Spanjer said. "The meeting was more called to decide as to who is responsible for what, and lay the processes out on the table, so that everybody knew what the process was."
​According to the Canada Border Services Agency, 403 people entered Canada near the town over a nine-month period last year, up from 340 in the 2015-16 fiscal year and 68 in 2013-14.
Last weekend, 22 people made the journey — 19 on Saturday and three on Sunday — according to the RCMP.

It was the largest group the CBSA says it's ever seen in such a short time span.
Last week, another 10 refugee claimant files were opened, said Rita Chahal, executive director of the Manitoba Interfaith Immigration Council.
"I certainly think people are taking their lives in their hands trying to do this in the middle of winter," Spanjer said Saturday.
"Even with the temperatures warming up, they're still subject to frostbite if they get stuck or lost out there. But that's a chance that they certainly appear to be willing to take."

At 6 a.m. it was –17C in Emerson.