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U.S. Customs and Border Protection have access to Canadian's medical history

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I saw the article earlier today, something isn't adding up with the story, the US doesn't have access to Canadian medical records but a suicide attempt would involve a visit by the cops and they would enter that info into the Canadian CPIC system which the US has access to.

I'd wager large dollars this is the case in this story.
 
I dunno Plommer. Nothing really surprises me anymore. I say they have access to everything.

The health data bases are provincial, not federal, which means they (US Immigration) would have to have agreements in place with every province, and that definitely hasn't happened.

As a matter of fact when I returned to Ontario from Saskatchewan and re-applied for coverage here the Saskatchewan government wasn't even aware I had my coverage in Ontario re-instated and was also providing coverage. I had to call them and tell the I was no longer in Saskatchewan.

I'd be very skeptical that the US has any interest in health records of foreigners and the logistics of obtaining records from 10 provinces.

The Star is just fear mongering.

I know Saskatchewan is pretty good at not divulging info on Canadians living there, just ask the 407 toll corp in Ontario, I've driven thousands of km's on the toll road without ever getting billed because my car had Sask plates and registration.
 

Looks like all the US Immigration dept had to do was a google search on this broad and the information would be right here.

"Ms. Richardson has written extensively about her mental health experiences. A simple Google search of her name reveals this."

Simple answer.

She also has her own site:

http://www.ellenrichardson.ca/bio/index.html

http://lifeofaschizophrenic.wordpress.com/2013/11/28/this-horrifies-me/
 
For certain countries you have to take a health exam to the embassy for the visa.

Canadians don't need a visa for the USA.

The story was a fear mongering attempt by the Star trying to scare people into believing the US gives a shit about the health records of foreigners and has access to private provincial medical databases in Canada. They do not.

The US has been convenient for Canadians making day trips to shop, there are much better vacation destinations for Canucks.
A lot of it has to do with how US immigration treats foreigners - especially so called "friends".

I know of lots of Canucks that avoid travel to the US for just this reason.
 
She attempted suicide and was hospitalized for it. The police automatically get involved when that happens and now you are in the CPIC. The first thing the border guard checks when you attempt to enter is your record on the CPIC. After a hospitalization for suicide attempt you are probably listed in there as Mentally Unstable and Suicidal.

At the end of the day, you don't have the right to enter the U.S. A border guard can deny you entry because it's fucking Tuesday.

Not to mention this bitch wrote a book about her mental episodes and she's written about her mental shit online on her website.

This is click bait for The Star.
 
I really wonder if the majority of Yanks really feel and are as patriotic as they appear.

Probably not. I've spent years trying to prove that mofuckers basic assumptions are wrong. Bottom line is, they really dont give a shit. Kinda like religion really.
I think that many appear patriotic by simply being unknowingly(?) disrespectful, dismissive of other countries, cultures.
But in a sense that they have some overwhelming love for their own country, meh
 
Toronto Mayor Rob Ford could be denied entry to U.S.

At the end of the day, you don't have the right to enter the U.S. A border guard can deny you entry because it's fucking Tuesday.
http://www.thestar.com/news/city_ha...yor_rob_ford_could_be_denied_entry_to_us.html
Toronto Mayor Rob Ford could be denied entry to U.S.

Toronto Mayor Rob Ford says he wants to attend the NHL Winter Classic hockey game near Detroit.
He may not get past Windsor.

Ford’s admission that he smoked crack cocaine in the last two years leaves him with a border problem. While he might still be granted entry into the United States — applications are handled on a case-by-case basis — he could also be rejected, according to the U.S. government and a Toronto immigration lawyer.

Under U.S. law, the mere admission of illegal drug use — in Ford’s case, an admission broadcast far and wide on American television — is grounds for a Canadian to be turned away at a crossing. The absence of criminal charges, let alone a conviction, doesn’t matter.

In an email exchange, Customs and Border Protection public affairs officer Mike Milne quoted from the controlled substances section of the U.S. Immigration and Nationality Act, which says someone is “inadmissible” to the U.S. if he has either been “convicted of” or “admits having committed” a violation of drug laws in the U.S. or elsewhere.

When pressed to clarify, Milne highlighted the words “admits having committed” and “inadmissible” in bright yellow. Translation: the admission of crack use is itself grounds for refusing a foreigner entry.

Lawyers specializing in cross-border legal questions say there are workarounds. Among Ford’s options: he can apply in advance for a “waiver of inadmissibility” from the U.S. to ensure safe passage.

Waiver requests are judged case-by-case and often depend on the reasons for travel. The application fee is $585, and the process can take up to a year.

Ford may test his luck as early as December. He told the Toronto Sun he “definitely” wants to attend the NHL’s Jan. 1 Winter Classic in Ann Arbor, Mich., when the Toronto Maple Leafs will face off against the Detroit Red Wings in front of 107,000 fans.

Ford’s chief of staff, Dan Jacobs, and lawyer, Dennis Morris, did not respond to a request to say whether the mayor has applied or will apply for a waiver.

“My advice to Rob Ford would be, ‘Don’t leave town.’ The short version of a long story is yes, he has a border problem,” said lawyer Joel Sandaluk of the Toronto firm Mamann, Sandaluk & Kingwell LLP.

“Even people who flippantly mention to a U.S. customs agent that they smoked a bit of weed in their life can have problems,” Sandaluk said. “And I believe in Ford’s case, he said ‘a lot’ of weed. And then (he) spoke about smoking crack.”

The letter of U.S. law isn’t always applied evenly at the border. Take Justin Trudeau, for example, who made headlines in August after admitting that he smoked marijuana as recently as three years ago.

Two months later, he had no difficulties when he travelled south for his first visit to Washington.

But the difference here isn’t just pot versus crack. It’s known versus unknown, immigration lawyers say. Trudeau’s family name may be a familiar one in U.S. political circles, but most Americans wouldn’t be able to pick the current Liberal leader out of a lineup. Rob Ford, on the other hand, is now a globally familiar face to watchers of news and late-night comedy shows alike.

“At this point, Rob Ford is a unique individual,” Sandaluk said. “I tell other clients in a similar situation, clients who haven’t been in the news, that their chances are 50-50.

“If you aren’t questioned specifically, if it doesn’t come up, then it’s ‘Ask me no questions, I’ll tell you no lies’ and you’re in. With Ford, my advice — out of an abundance of caution — would be different.”

Ford has been let into the U.S. repeatedly despite his 1999 conviction in Florida for impaired driving. (He had a marijuana joint with him when he was arrested; a possession charge was dropped.) Impaired driving is not one of the offences for which foreigners are denied entry, according to the CBP website.

Ford has spent time at his family’s condo in Florida during his mayoral term. He has also led business missions to Austin and to Chicago, where his family business has an office. A planned mission to Boston was called off in the wake of the crack scandal, and no other official trips are currently planned for the last year of Ford’s term.

Councillor Michael Thompson, the Ford-appointed chair of the economic development committee, said Deputy Mayor Norm Kelly could represent the city on a future trip Ford was not permitted to make. But he said that “it does pose, obviously, a problem” to have a mayor who may not be able to promote the city.

“Look, even if the U.S. had said the mayor would be allowed, the question would be, would other mayors and other folks stand with our mayor?” Thompson said.

Abby Deshman, direct of the public safety program at the Canadian Civil Liberties Association, said it is “really concerning” that U.S. border officials deny entry to Canadians on the basis of non-conviction information about such things as mental illness and 911 calls. Ford, she said, “has the right to be presumed innocent until proven guilty.”