logo
RCMP drones to patrol corridor along part of U.S. border in effort to boost security

RCMP drones to patrol corridor along part of U.S. border in effort to boost security

National Post3 days ago
The RCMP is introducing a drone corridor along part of the Canada-U.S. border in an effort to boost security.
Article content
Drones are to patrol the border in Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba in what the RCMP says is a trial.
Article content
Article content
The force says the corridor has been established with help from Transport Canada and drone patrols will target illegal activity including smuggling and drug trafficking.
Article content
Article content
It says the corridor extends from the ground to 500 feet in the air and one nautical mile north of the border, or just under two kilometres.
Article content
Article content
The RCMP has increased its presence at the border with drones, helicopters and more as part of Ottawa's $1.3-billion pledge to boost security in an attempt to stave off tariffs from U.S. President Donald Trump.
Article content
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Tensions high at town hall as Alberta Next Panel faces polarized crowd in Edmonton
Tensions high at town hall as Alberta Next Panel faces polarized crowd in Edmonton

CBC

timean hour ago

  • CBC

Tensions high at town hall as Alberta Next Panel faces polarized crowd in Edmonton

A polarized crowd shouted at each other — and at Premier Danielle Smith — at the third Alberta Next town hall in Edmonton Thursday night. The 16-member panel, chaired by Smith, are holding 10 town halls across Alberta this summer to hear what people think about some proposals for how the province can reset its relationship with the federal government. The panellists found a skeptical and critical audience in west Edmonton. Some in the crowd laughed at Smith, when she said in her introductory remakes, "when Edmonton speaks, we listen. Many in the audience jeered at the videos that introduced each of the topics, particularly the section on leaving the Canada Pension Plan in favour of an Alberta plan. Some even pushed back at the premise of the panel. "Alberta doesn't really want you doing this right now," one man said. While people hostile to the proposals dominated the microphones, many supporters were in the crowd. The majority of people in the room were in favour of each of the six initiatives during the straw polls taken throughout the night. Kathryn Speck thanked Smith for being a truly democratic leader who is willing to listen to citizens. "I apologize on behalf of these rude Edmontonians," she said. The panel is asking people to weigh in on matters like switching to a Alberta Pension Plan, replacing the RCMP with a provincial police service, and reopening talks on the Constitution "to empower and better protect provincial rights." Bruce McAllister, the panel's moderator, lost patience with the crowd at a number of points in the evening. He yelled at one person in the audience telling him to "knock it off" and urged another to not "be a jerk." WATCH | Will Alberta Next panel result in a plan, or just another outlet for frustration? Will Alberta Next panel result in a plan, or just another outlet for frustration? 27 days ago Premier Danielle Smith's Alberta Next panel aims to hear about how the province can protect itself Ottawa while building a strong and sovereign Alberta within Canada. The CBC's Helen Pike talks to a conservative strategist and a political scientist about what the town hall format is for, and what value the province might see in hosting these discussions. Most of the people who spoke about the Alberta Pension Plan proposal were opposed to the idea. Several people told the panel that Albertans have rejected the idea so they didn't understand why Smith and her government wouldn't let it go. Two audience members criticized the province's new expense disclosure policy, which removes a requirement for the premier, ministers, deputy ministers and senior staff to publicly disclose receipts for expenses over $100. Smith said she was also confused by the policy. She said cabinet wanted to address the concerns of MLAs who didn't want the names of their favourite hotels disclosed publicly for safety reasons. "That was what the policy was supposed to be," Smith said. "It turned out to be something quite different. So we're going to see if we can maybe track down how that happened and do a reversal on that." Thursday night's event was the third town hall meeting. Earlier events were held last month in Red Deer and Edmonton. At those town halls, some Albertans offered support for the proposals, some protested at the gates and others dismissed the panel as a self-serving political exercise meant to stir up discontent and division. It is set to host events in Fort McMurray and Lloydminster in two weeks. The premier has said one of the reasons for the panel is to address concerns that are inspiring separatist sentiment in the province. Alberta public opinion pollster Janet Brown has said the government's effort is not a polling exercise but a public engagement exercise and that changing the survey questions midstream underscores that.

Alberta Next Panel faces hostile, polarized crowd in Edmonton
Alberta Next Panel faces hostile, polarized crowd in Edmonton

CBC

timean hour ago

  • CBC

Alberta Next Panel faces hostile, polarized crowd in Edmonton

A polarized crowd shouted at each other — and at Premier Danielle Smith — at the third Alberta Next town hall in Edmonton Thursday night. The 16-member panel, chaired by Smith, are holding 10 town halls across Alberta this summer to hear what people think about some proposals for how the province can reset its relationship with the federal government. The panellists found a skeptical and critical audience in west Edmonton. Some in the crowd laughed at Smith, when she said in her introductory remakes, "when Edmonton speaks, we listen. Many in the audience jeered at the videos that introduced each of the topics, particularly the section on leaving the Canada Pension Plan in favour of an Alberta plan. Some even pushed back at the premise of the panel. "Alberta doesn't really want you doing this right now," one man said. While people hostile to the proposals dominated the microphones, many supporters were in the crowd. The majority of people in the room were in favour of each of the six initiatives during the straw polls taken throughout the night. Kathryn Speck thanked Smith for being a truly democratic leader who is willing to listen to citizens. "I apologize on behalf of these rude Edmontonians," she said. The panel is asking people to weigh in on matters like switching to a Alberta Pension Plan, replacing the RCMP with a provincial police service, and reopening talks on the Constitution "to empower and better protect provincial rights." Bruce McAllister, the panel's moderator, lost patience with the crowd at a number of points in the evening. He yelled at one person in the audience telling him to "knock it off" and urged another to not "be a jerk." WATCH | Will Alberta Next panel result in a plan, or just another outlet for frustration? Will Alberta Next panel result in a plan, or just another outlet for frustration? 27 days ago Premier Danielle Smith's Alberta Next panel aims to hear about how the province can protect itself Ottawa while building a strong and sovereign Alberta within Canada. The CBC's Helen Pike talks to a conservative strategist and a political scientist about what the town hall format is for, and what value the province might see in hosting these discussions. Most of the people who spoke about the Alberta Pension Plan proposal were opposed to the idea. Several people told the panel that Albertans have rejected the idea so they didn't understand why Smith and her government wouldn't let it go. Two audience members criticized the province's new expense disclosure policy, which removes a requirement for the premier, ministers, deputy ministers and senior staff to publicly disclose receipts for expenses over $100. Smith said she was also confused by the policy. She said cabinet wanted to address the concerns of MLAs who didn't want the names of their favourite hotels disclosed publicly for safety reasons. "That was what the policy was supposed to be," Smith said. "It turned out to be something quite different. So we're going to see if we can maybe track down how that happened and do a reversal on that." Thursday night's event was the third town hall meeting. Earlier events were held last month in Red Deer and Edmonton. At those town halls, some Albertans offered support for the proposals, some protested at the gates and others dismissed the panel as a self-serving political exercise meant to stir up discontent and division. It is set to host events in Fort McMurray and Lloydminster in two weeks. The premier has said one of the reasons for the panel is to address concerns that are inspiring separatist sentiment in the province. Alberta public opinion pollster Janet Brown has said the government's effort is not a polling exercise but a public engagement exercise and that changing the survey questions midstream underscores that.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store