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Quebec asks for federal help as number of asylum-seekers spikes

Quebec ministers, Lucie Charlebois, David Heurtel, Jean-Marc Fournier, Sebastien Proulx, asylum seekers, Montreal,
Quebec ministers Lucie Charlebois, David Heurtel, Jean-Marc Fournier and Sebastien Proulx, left to right, discuss the situation involving asylum seekers during a news conference on Apr. 16, 2018 in Montreal. Photo by The Canadian Press/Paul Chiasson

The Quebec government says it is facing even more asylum-seekers entering the province from the United States this year and is asking the federal government for help.

Immigration Minister David Heurtel says the number is forecast to increase significantly this summer.

He told a news conference Monday there have been 6,074 asylum-seekers so far this year, up from about 2,000 during the same period last year.

Heurtel says projections suggest there will be up to 400 crossings a day this summer, compared to 250 in 2017.

Several senior Quebec ministers joined Heurtel to announce the province will soon reach its capacity for accommodating asylum-seekers.

Heurtel is expected to meet with federal officials in Ottawa on Wednesday to come up with a plan.

Last year, the influx of border crossers was linked to the end of a U.S. government program that granted Haitians so-called "temporary protected status" following the massive earthquake that struck their homeland in 2010.

This year, Heurtel says asylum-seekers are coming from various countries.

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