驅逐出境預算曝光,誰才是真正的買單者 │ 加拿大移民 2025
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w_SHgfQUtHE
加拿大紀事 2025年10月6日
渥太華的巨額支出引發了全國的關注。加拿大政府剛剛撥款超過5億美元,用於加強驅逐出境、邊境執法和遣返工作——這是多年來最大的驅逐出境預算。但這筆錢究竟花在了哪裏?更重要的是,誰來買單?
在本期加拿大移民 2025 更新中,我們將揭秘這筆創紀錄的5億美元驅逐出境預算背後的真相——它如何影響納稅人、移民以及加拿大在全球的聲譽。
從新的成本回收費到擴大的加拿大邊境服務局 (CBSA) 拘留設施,這段視頻揭示了政府計劃如何根據其新的邊境計劃管理執法、技術和遣返工作。
我們還將揭秘“可能決定打擊行動命運的隱藏變量——加拿大的數字弱點”。
移民係統的這一關鍵環節可能決定渥太華這項大規模投資的成敗。
在本視頻中,您將了解:
• 加拿大為何斥資 5 億美元用於驅逐出境和邊境行動
• 新的驅逐出境費對移民和逾期居留簽證持有者意味著什麽
• 此次打擊行動如何影響加拿大工作許可、簽證續簽和移民處理時間
• 加拿大移民係統內部的數字化弱點
• 納稅人為何現在間接承擔驅逐出境和執法成本
• 敬請期待——您將了解科技如何成就或毀掉渥太華 2025 年移民計劃。
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創紀錄的預算曝光。渥太華斥資 5 億美元加強驅逐出境打擊行動。歡迎回到《加拿大紀事報》。加拿大的移民係統正麵臨前所未有的壓力,渥太華正以資金、權力和一項引發全國熱議的計劃來應對。加拿大政府斥資五億美元,推動近代史上規模最大的驅逐出境行動之一。但這筆錢究竟流向何處?誰會受到影響?這筆巨額預算會永遠改變加拿大移民法的執行方式嗎?在今天的視頻中,我們將揭示這筆創紀錄的支出將如何影響納稅人、新移民以及加拿大在世界舞台上的聲譽。你將看到
這種轉變將如何重塑邊境運營,以及為什麽這不僅僅關乎執法,還關乎效率、技術和控製。請耐心觀看視頻,我們將揭示可能決定此次驅逐行動命運的隱藏變量——加拿大的數字弱點。它可能會成就或毀掉渥太華耗資五億美元的計劃。如果你關心這些數字背後的真相,請務必訂閱並打開通知,這樣你就不會錯過任何更新。讓我們開始吧。加拿大移民和庇護係統的壓力
已經達到了臨界點。積壓案件
不斷增加,執法團隊
不堪重負,政治壓力也越來越大。渥太華的答案是將
數億美元投入到
驅逐出境、拘留和邊境行動中。這是多年來最大的
執法預算。但這五億美元究竟能買到什麽?誰來承擔這些費用?加拿大的
移民係統幾十年前設計時,
隻處理少量案件。如今,它麵臨著
前所未有的大量尋求庇護者、
臨時外國工人和非法入境者。結果,整個流程充斥著上訴和行政延誤。渥太華的解決方案是擴大加拿大邊境服務局的規模,
旨在遏製違規行為,加快遣返速度,並從被驅逐者身上收回部分成本。但僅靠資金就能解決問題嗎?還是隻會暴露更深層次的缺陷?五億美元究竟意味著什麽?
根據加拿大邊境服務局(AY)2.25-26部門計劃,邊境執法項目將獲得約5.13億加元,高於兩年前的3.81億加元。這是AY曆史上最大的一筆撥款,標誌著其向強化執法和加快遣返速度的重大轉變。這筆資金是渥太華更廣泛的邊境計劃的一部分,該計劃旨在實現安全現代化、改進情報係統並擴大拘留能力。並非每一美元都直接用於驅逐出境。但這些投資加在一起,加強了使遣返成為可能的基礎設施。從調查、聽證會到最終的回國航班。官員們所說的5億加元,指的是維護整個執法生態係統的總成本。新的遣返費用將於
2025年4月開始。加拿大邊境服務局
將自1993年以來首次全麵改革其遣返成本回收係統。
每宗案件約1,500加元的舊固定費用將被
兩級費用取代。陪同遣返,即
官員陪同個人,
費用約為12,800加元。
無人陪同遣返,即個人
獨自旅行,費用將超過
3,800加元。
如果有人無力支付,政府
將承擔費用並記錄欠款,
這可能會阻止其未來再次入境。
2024年,收回的欠款不到50萬加元。
與總數相比微不足道所有費用。渥太華希望提高收費能夠阻止逾期居留,並減輕納稅人的負擔。驅逐出境
費用高昂。其中包括航班、
文件準備、護送和拘留
時間。官員們認為,收費更接近真實成本可以促進公平,
但批評人士表示,這會懲罰那些已經在苦苦掙紮的弱勢群體。法律障礙和運營挑戰。即使資金創紀錄,
遣返也不可能一蹴而就。
遣返必須遵守加拿大法律和國際法,在速度和正當程序之間取得平衡。加拿大邊境服務局專注於
涉及嚴重犯罪、難民申請失敗以及
可強製執行的遣返令的案件。每個人
仍然擁有權利,如果他們擔心受到迫害,可以進行遣返前風險評估,可以選擇向
聯邦法院或移民上訴部門上訴,
並可能出於人道主義原因獲得延期。遣返還取決於目的地國的合作。一些政府拒絕
簽發旅行證件,導致人們
多年來處於法律困境。拘留容量
又增加了另一個挑戰。包括不列顛哥倫比亞省和新斯科舍省在內的幾個省份終止了允許被拘留者進入省級監獄的協議。
渥太華此後擴建了自己的拘留設施,包括在魁北克省桑坦德倫市建立一個新的移民拘留中心。
即使有了新的資金,遣返工作也仍然以外交和法律的步伐進行,而不是政治。這會帶來人文和政治的
後果。每一次遣返背後都有一段
人性化的故事。許多受影響的人是
低收入工人、學生和
在加拿大居住多年的
被拒絕的尋求庇護者。人權倡導者警告說,不斷上漲的成本和更快的遣返速度將對這些群體造成最嚴重的打擊。新的費用可能會使他們
進一步陷入債務或絕望之中。渥太華堅稱驅逐令隻針對那些
沒有合法居留權的人,但批評人士認為,嚴厲的執法可能會損害加拿大的人道主義形象。加拿大仍然受條約約束,這些條約禁止將任何人遣返到
他們麵臨迫害或酷刑的地方,而錯誤可能會造成
改變人生的後果。政治上,政府麵臨著嚴峻的考驗。在選民對住房和公共服務壓力感到沮喪的情況下,政府必須展現同情心,同時證明對邊境的控製。這種做法旨在展現強硬態度,同時又不放棄加拿大的人道主義價值觀。但一次
錯誤的驅逐令或一次引人注目的錯誤都可能引發公眾的憤怒。
隨著人數的增加,定義的不斷變化,
驅逐令的數量正在增加,盡管數據因統計方式而異。2025 年 2 月的一份報告記錄了
2024 年的驅逐令數量為 7,300 起,比上一年增加了 8%,為十年來的最高水平。另一份政府更新報告稱,2024年1月至10月期間,超過1.4萬名不準入境的外國人被遣返。兩份報告都準確無誤。第一份報告統計了根據加拿大移民法正式遣返的人數,而第二份報告則包括自願遣返和行政遣返。兩者傳遞的信息相同。加拿大正在加大執法力度,而新的資金將確保執法力度持續加強。問責製和透明度至關重要。由於涉及如此多的資金,公眾希望獲得有效使用的證據。有多少遣返令真正得到執行?有多少新增收入被收回?有多少案件因法律或外交延誤而停滯?加拿大邊境服務局表示,計劃對其係統進行現代化升級,改進文件記錄,並與外國政府更緊密地合作,以加快遣返速度。該局還在投資建設更人性化的拘留設施,並招聘更多員工來管理工作量。這項創紀錄的預算不僅僅關乎航班和護送,還關乎重建整個邊境執法框架。感謝您一直關注我們。我們感謝您抽出時間閱讀,並希望這些信息對您有所幫助。
加拿大的數字弱點
可能決定此次打擊行動的命運。資金可以增強能力,但技術才能推動成功。渥太華耗資五億美元的打擊行動的結果,
可能取決於一個被忽視的因素。
數字協調。多年來,
執法機構一直在努力應對數據庫碎片化和文件傳輸緩慢的問題。加拿大邊境服務局、加拿大移民、難民和公民部以及加拿大移民和難民委員會之間的信息共享仍然過時且效率低下。新的預算包括升級這些係統的資金,但專家警告說,如果沒有真正的整合,數百萬美元可能會被浪費在追查紙質記錄上。更智能的分析
可以識別哪些案件最容易
被移除,並減少不必要的
拘留時間。數字簽到和
生物識別驗證可以取代
部分實體拘留,從而節省成本並
保護權利。但如果實施不力,
這些工具可能會引發隱私擔憂,
並削弱公眾信任。如果
渥太華真心希望取得成果,它不僅必須投資人力,還必須投資於
智能係統,使
執法速度更快、更公平,以及更負責任的前進道路。構建一個
更智能的係統。真正的問題不僅僅是成本,而是協調。為了使
這份創紀錄的預算行之有效,加拿大
必須:第一,優先考慮基於數據的遣返,以專注於能夠有效解決的案件。第二,加強各機構、法院和外國政府之間的合作。第三,在威懾力和對低收入移民的公平性之間取得平衡。
第四,公布透明的績效結果,以維護問責製。
第五,投資建設維護加拿大價值觀的人道聯邦設施。
如果執行得當,這可以
將一個過時的係統轉變為一個積極主動、透明的係統。如果執行不力,它就有可能成為另一個昂貴的
官僚主義實驗。加拿大創紀錄的
執法計劃標誌著一個轉折點。
五億美元用於證明移民法仍然有效。
它能否恢複控製力還是
引發爭議,將取決於
渥太華如何平衡秩序和同情心。加拿大耗資五億加元的執法行動不僅僅是一個預算問題,更是對優先事項和國家價值觀的考驗。政府表示,新的資金將使執法係統更快、更公平,但也引發了關於透明度和人性化的嚴峻問題。
Deportation Budget EXPOSED & Who Really Pays for It │ Canada Immigration 2025
Canada Chronicles 2025年10月6日
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w_SHgfQUtHE
Ottawa’s spending spree has raised eyebrows across the country. The Canadian government just allocated over half a billion dollars to strengthen deportations, border enforcement, and removals — the largest deportation budget in years. But where is that money really going? And more importantly, who’s paying for it?
In this Canada Immigration 2025 update, we break down the truth behind this record $500 million deportation budget — how it impacts taxpayers, immigrants, and Canada’s reputation worldwide.
From new cost-recovery fees to expanded CBSA detention facilities, this video reveals how the government plans to manage enforcement, technology, and removals under its new Border Plan.
We’ll also uncover “The Hidden Variable That Could Decide the Crackdown’s Fate — Canada’s Digital Weak Spot.”
This crucial part of the system could determine whether Ottawa’s massive investment succeeds or fails.
In this video, you’ll learn:
• Why Canada is spending $500 million on deportations and border operations
• What new removal fees mean for immigrants and overstayed visa holders
• How this crackdown affects Canada work permit, visa renewal, and immigration processing times
• The digital weaknesses inside Canada’s immigration system
• Why taxpayers are now indirectly funding deportation and enforcement costs
• Stay tuned until the end — you’ll want to hear how technology could make or break Ottawa’s 2025 immigration plan.
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Record budget exposed. Ottawa spends half a billion to power deportation crackdown. Welcome back to Canada Chronicles. Canada's immigration system is under more pressure than ever, and Ottawa is responding with money, power, and a plan that's sparking nationwide debate. The government is spending half a billion dollars to fuel one of the biggest deportation crackdowns in recent history. But where is that money really going? Who will feel the impact? And could this massive budget change the way Canada enforces its immigration laws forever? In today's video, we'll uncover how this record spending affects taxpayers, newcomers, and the country's reputation on the world stage. You'll
see how this shift could reshape border operations and why it's not just about enforcement. It's about efficiency, technology, and control. Stay until the end as we reveal the hidden variable that could decide the crackdown's fate, Canada's digital weak spot. It could make or break Ottawa's half billion dollar plan. If you care about what's really happening behind the numbers, make sure to subscribe and turn on notifications so you never miss an update. Let's get started. The strain on
Canada's immigration and asylum system
has reached a breaking point. Backlogs
are swelling, enforcement teams are
overwhelmed, and political pressure is
growing. Ottawa's answer is to channel
hundreds of millions of dollars into
deportation, detention, and border
operations. This is the largest
enforcement budget in years. But what
does half a billion dollars actually buy
and who carries the cost? Canada's
system was designed decades ago for
smaller case loads. Today, it faces
unprecedented numbers of asylum seekers,
temporary foreign workers, and irregular
entrance. The result is a process
clogged with appeals and administrative
delays. Ottawa's solution is to expand
the Canada Border Services Agency,
aiming to deter violations, accelerate
removals, and recover some costs from
deportes. But can money alone fix the
problem, or will it simply expose deeper
flaws? What half a billion really means?
According to the Canada Border Services
AY's 2,25-26
departmental plan, the border
enforcement program will receive about
513 million, up from $381 million just 2
years ago. It's the largest allocation
in the AY's history and signals a major
shift towards stronger enforcement and
faster removals. This funding is part of
Ottawa's broader border plan designed to
modernize security, improve intelligence
systems, and expand detention capacity.
Not every dollar goes directly to
deportations. But together, these
investments strengthen the
infrastructure that makes removals
possible. From investigations and
hearings to the final flight home. When
officials call it half a billion
dollars, they mean the total cost of
maintaining an entire enforcement
ecosystem. The new removal fees starting
April 2025. The Canada Border Services
Agency will overhaul its cost recovery
system for removals for the first time
since 1993. The old flat rate of about
$1,500 per case is being replaced with
two tiers. Escorted removals, when
officers accompany the individual, will
cost around $12,800.
Unescorted removals, where the person
travels independently, will exceed
$3,800.
If someone cannot pay, the government
covers the cost and records the debt,
which can block future re-entry. In
2024, less than $500,000 was recovered.
Tiny compared to total expenses. Ottawa
hopes higher fees will deter overstays
and reduce taxpayer burden. Deportations
are costly. They involve flights,
documentation, escorts, and detention
time. Officials argue that charging
closer to true cost promotes fairness,
but critics say it punishes vulnerable
people already struggling to stay
afloat. Legal barriers and operational
challenges. Even with record funding,
removals can't happen overnight.
Deportations must comply with Canadian
and international law, balancing speed
with due process. The Canada Border
Services Agency focuses on cases
involving serious criminality, failed
refugee claimants, and those under
enforcable removal orders. Each
individual still has rights, a pre-
removal risk assessment if they fear
persecution, the option to appeal before
the federal court or immigration appeal
division, and possible deferrals for
humanitarian reasons. Removals also
depend on cooperation from destination
countries. Some governments refuse to
issue travel documents, leaving people
in legal limbo for years. Detention
capacity adds another challenge. Several
provinces, including British Columbia
and Nova Scotia, ended agreements
allowing detainees in provincial jails.
Ottawa has since expanded its own
facilities, including a new immigration
holding center in Santan DeLen, Quebec.
Even with new funding, removals move at
the pace of diplomacy and law, not
politics. The human and political
fallout. Behind every deportation is a
human story. Many affected are
low-income workers, students, and
rejected asylum seekers who have lived
in Canada for years. Human rights
advocates warned that rising costs and
faster removals will hit these groups
hardest. The new fees could push them
further into debt or desperation. Ottawa
insists deportations target only those
with no legal right to remain, but
critics argue that harsh enforcement
could tarnish Canada's humanitarian
image. The country remains bound by
treaties that forbid returning anyone to
places where they face persecution or
torture and mistakes can have
lifealtering consequences. Politically,
the government faces a tight rope. It
must appear compassionate while proving
control of the border amid voter
frustration over housing and public
service pressures. The approach is meant
to project toughness without abandoning
Canada's humanitarian values. But one
wrongful deportation or high-profile
error could ignite public outrage.
Rising numbers, shifting definitions,
deportations are increasing, though the
data varies depending on how it's
counted. A February 2025 report recorded
7,300 deportations in 2024, an 8% rise
from the previous year, the highest in a
decade. Another government update stated
that more than 14,000 inadmissible
foreign nationals were removed between
January and October 2024. Both are
correct. The first counts formal
deportations under Canadian immigration
law while the second includes voluntary
and administrative removals. The message
is the same. Canada is ramping up
enforcement and the new funding ensures
that pace continues. Accountability and
transparency. With so much money at
stake, the public wants proof that it's
being spent effectively. How many
removal orders are actually enforced?
How much of the new revenue is
recovered? And how many cases stall
because of legal or diplomatic delays?
The Canada Border Services Agency says
it plans to modernize its systems,
improve documentation, and work more
closely with foreign governments to
accelerate returns. It's also investing
in more humane detention facilities and
hiring additional staff to manage the
workload. This record budget isn't just
about flights and escorts. It's about
rebuilding the entire framework of
border enforcement. Thanks for staying
with us this far. We appreciate your
time and hope you're finding this
information valuable.
The hidden variable that could decide
the crackdown's fate, Canada's digital
weak spot. Money builds capacity, but
technology drives success. The outcome
of Ottawa's halfbillion dollar crackdown
may depend on one overlooked factor.
Digital coordination. For years,
enforcement agencies have struggled with
fragmented databases and slow file
transfers. Information sharing between
the Canada Border Services Agency,
Immigration, Refugees, and Citizenship
Canada, and the Immigration and Refugee
Board of Canada remains outdated and
inefficient. The new budget includes
funding to upgrade these systems, but
experts warn that without real
integration, millions could be wasted
chasing paper trails. Smarter analytics
could identify which cases are easiest
to remove and reduce unnecessary
detention time. Digital check-ins and
biometric verification could replace
some physical custody, saving costs and
protecting rights. But if implemented
poorly, these tools could raise privacy
concerns and erode public trust. If
Ottawa truly wants results, it must
invest not only in manpower, but in
intelligent systems that make
enforcement faster, fairer, and more
accountable path forward. Building a
smarter system. The real issue isn't
just cost. It's coordination. To make
this record budget effective, Canada
must one, prioritize datadriven removals
to focus on cases that can be resolved
efficiently. Two, improve cooperation
between agencies, courts, and foreign
governments. Three, balance deterrence
with fairness for low-income migrants.
Four, publish transparent performance
results to maintain accountability.
Five, invest in humane federal
facilities that uphold Canadian values.
If executed properly, this could
transform an outdated system into one
that's proactive and transparent. If
not, it risks becoming another expensive
bureaucratic experiment. Canada's record
enforcement plan marks a turning point.
Half a billion dollars devoted to
proving that immigration laws still have
power. Whether it restores control or
sparks controversy will depend on how
Ottawa manages the balance between order
and compassion. Canada's half billion
dollar enforcement push is more than a
budget story. It's a test of priorities
and national values. The government says
the new funding will make the system
faster and fairer, but it also raises
tough questions about transparency and humanity.