By Meg Olson
When the Point Roberts students boarded the school bus before dawn Thursday, January 10, they found some seats already taken. U.S. Representative Rick Larsen, accompanied by school superintendent Gordon Dolman, were along for the ride.
You just have to get in a mindset, as a family, that this is what you do every day, said U.S. Representative Rick Larsen after spending more than two hours on the Point Roberts school bus, starting at the Blaine bus barn at 6:30 a.m. The kids on the bus have been quite creative in learning to use the time, whether its reading, sharing toys or talking. While students on the bus now bypass border lines, that wasnt the case in the days following September 11 and Larsen said keeping the school bus trip as short as possible for Point Roberts students needed to be a priority.
Larsen got off the bus at 8:45 a.m. and reported to the Peace Arch port of entry for duty as a U.S. Immigration and Naturalization inspector. I wanted to experience first-hand what its like to be an INS inspector after September 11, he said. To have to ask the questions, search the car and make a decision in 90 seconds is difficult enough. I dont know how they did it before September 11 in eight seconds.
After a brief training Larsen donned a bulletproof vest and INS jacket and headed out to the inspection booths. Like other INS inspectors, Larsen worked a half hour in the inspection lanes followed by a half hour inside. Before lunch time he had covered quite a few bases, checking proof of citizenship, inspecting trunks and tackling more complicated immigration questions at the counter inside.
When it was all over, Larsen said he had a better understanding of the minute-mystery inspectors face in each vehicle. Youre looking for something thats not consistent, he said. Checking what they tell you with whats in the vehicle. Larsen also learned the wide scope of an inspectors powers at the border to make that rapid-fire determination of whether a person should enter the country. You can pretty much do whatever you want to do to whomever. You just have to temper that with some common sense, said INS district assistant director for inspections Ron Hays.
Finally, Larsen got a broader picture of an inspectors day, from 12-hour days, six hours in a both and 300 cars, to the brighter moments at Americas gateway. This can be a very satisfying job because youre really doing something useful, he said, even if its just saying hello.
During Larsens shift at the Peace Arch, travelers waited no more than a 20 minutes, but Larsen said a normal, pre September 11 volume would swamp the border at existing staffing levels. Were asking for INS headquarters to send 70 more customs and 70 INS inspectors, he said. We knock on that door every day and well keep making noise.
The days of the eight-second inspection are over, according to Larsen, and the high level of scrutiny inspectors are now turning on each vehicle is needed. For securitys sake we need to have that kind of protection.
However, Larsen doesnt think more security needs to mean less mobility. Its a matter of full staffing in every booth, getting the technology in place so NEXUS can pre-clear frequent travelers, more coordination between Canadian and U.S. agencies. If we just keep things the way they are were going to continue to have problems.
Once staffing levels are up at the border, Larsen said he thinks cross-border traffic and the business it brings will be back. Its an if you build it, they will come scenario, he said. Show people were making the commitment, that it wont be an hour wait, and those numbers will come back up..