Ottawa has updated its website to say when using a status card to cross the Canada-U.S. border, travellers are strongly recommended to carry a valid passport as well.Graham Hughes/The Canadian Press
The federal government has updated its travel advice for the United States, urging First Nations people to carry a passport in addition to a status card when crossing the border.
Before this week, the government website said First Nations people could “freely” enter the United States for the purposes of employment, study, retirement, investing or immigration.
As of Thursday, the website has been updated with new guidelines.
The website now says First Nations people “may” be able to cross the Canada-U.S. border by land or water with their Secure Certificate of Indian Status, also known as a secure status card.
The website says acceptance of all status cards is “entirely at the discretion of U.S. officials.” Status cards and secure status cards aren’t accepted travel documents for air travel, it says.
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When using a status card to cross the Canada-U.S. border, travellers are strongly recommended to carry a valid passport and use a valid machine-readable secure status card, the website says.
As of February 2019, the government says all new and renewed secure status cards are issued with a machine-readable field. The government began issuing secure status cards in 2009, phasing out older versions of laminated, paper or plastic status cards.
“While you may have previously crossed the Canada-U.S. border with only a secure status card, (Indigenous Services Canada) now strongly recommends also carrying a valid passport when travelling outside of Canada,” says the Government of Canada website.
The government says people registered under the Indian Act entering the U.S. to live or work may also be asked to provide documentation to “prove the percentage of Indian blood required under U.S. law.”
The Assembly of First Nations has warned First Nations people to be wary of crossing the border into the United States in response to immigration enforcement raids and the detention of some Indigenous people.
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AFN National Chief Cindy Woodhouse Nepinak has confirmed that at least one First Nations person had a negative encounter recently with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, better known as ICE, and that person has since returned to Canada.
The case prompted the advocacy body to issue a statement warning First Nations members to make sure they have the right documentation and identification when crossing the border.
In a statement, Indigenous Services Canada said last month it had been made aware that some people have recently reported the confiscation, or damage, of status cards in the U.S. It said the department can issue emergency status cards, and will expedite requests from people who have been affected.
Mississauga First Nation has also warned its members against crossing the border, citing ICE’s recent detention of Indigenous people. Three Oglala Sioux Tribe members were detained at a homeless encampment by ICE agents in Minnesota earlier this year.
Several other First Nations have issued similar warnings, including Six Nations of the Grand River near Hamilton and Garden River First Nation near Sault Ste. Marie, Ont.
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The Jay Treaty Alliance, a body representing tribal governments and First Nations communities on both sides of the border, is encouraging First Nations people crossing the border to the U.S. to ensure they are carrying their familial lineage letter, status card, long-form birth certificate and government-issued photo ID.
U.S. tribal members are being encouraged to carry their tribal IDs, state-issued IDs or driver’s licences, or a U.S. passport.