Pacific Highway Border Crossing

The Pacific Highway Border Crossing connects the town of Blaine, Washington and the city of Surrey, British Columbia on the Canada–US border. Interstate 5/Washington State Route 543 on the American side joins British Columbia Highway 15 on the Canadian side. Since the 1970s, commercial vehicles driving directly between Blaine and Surrey have been required to use this route, one of the five busiest commercial US-Canada border crossings.

Pacific Highway Border Crossing
The US border inspection station at the Pacific Highway Border Crossing
Location
CountryUnited States; Canada
Location
  • SR 543 / Hwy 15 / Pacific Highway
  • US Port: 9901 Pacific Highway, Blaine, WA 98230
  • Canadian Port: 28 176th Street, Surrey BC V3Z 9R9
Coordinates49°00′07″N 122°44′06″W
Details
Opened1913
Hours24 hours
Website
US Canadian

Canadian side

On the 1891 opening of the New Westminster and Southern Railway, controlled by the Great Northern Railway (GN), a border inspection station was established about 300 metres (984 ft) west of the present crossing. When the GN relocated its track via White Rock in 1909, the border station moved westward creating the present Peace Arch Border Crossing. In 1913, a road was built along the former GN right-of-way (present Highway 15) to connect with the Yale Road (present Fraser Highway), which created an important road link between Vancouver and the border. That year, A.K. Westland became the inaugural officer at this new port of entry. He operated from a tent at the side of the road, which was replaced months later by a gabled wooden building.

In 1923, an official ceremony commemorated the cement surfacing of the Canadian section of the Pacific Highway. To handle increased traffic through the crossing, the customs office was enlarged, which included a two-bedroom upstairs suite. Vehicle crash damage to the closed gates, which barred entry from midnight to 8am, led to their replacement with sensors. In 1937, the customs and immigration building was replaced by a Tudor-revival style structure. By 1944, this was the third busiest crossing in Canada. In 1953, a freight warehouse, truck bays and bus terminal were added. The 1937 building continued to handle auto traffic prior to replacement in 1986.[1]

The Port of New Westminster provided administrative oversight until the status was upgraded to an independent port in 1938.[2]

A vehicle inspection discovered 121 kg (267 lb) of cocaine in 2008,[3] 76 kg (168 lb) in 2009,[4] 62 kg (137 lb) in 2013,[5] 107.5 kg (237 lb) in 2016,[6] and 71.5 kg (158 lb) (CA$3.5 million) in 2021.[7]

In 2022, protesting truck drivers seeking to end public health measures related to the COVID-19 pandemic blockaded the crossing for a few days.[8]

US side

The initial border office occupied a residence.[9] In 1915, the 24-hour office at the present Peace Arch site was closed and service at the Pacific Highway site extended to around 18 hours daily.[10] The US operated out of large industrial building until a brick Georgian-revival border station was built in 1931. The crossing remained closed at weekends.[11]

The current facility was built in 1987.

In 2012, the NEXUS hours were extended, becoming 6am to 9pm.[12]

See also

References

  1. "Custom Entry Ports in Surrey". www.surreyhistory.ca.
  2. Legg, Herbert (1962). Customs Services in Western Canada, 1867–1925. The Creston Review Ltd. p. 202.
  3. "Province". 23 Dec 2008 via PressReader.
  4. "US Attorney's Office". www.justice.gov. 2 Apr 2010.
  5. "CBC News". www.cbc.ca. 11 Jul 2013.
  6. "Daily Hive". www.aldergrovestar.com. 7 Nov 2016.
  7. "Aldergrove Star". www.aldergrovestar.com. 15 Apr 2021.
  8. "CBC News". www.cbc.ca. 15 Feb 2022.
  9. "New Westminster News". www.library.ubc.ca. 12 Jul 1913. p. 8.
  10. "Daily Colonist". www.archive.org. 10 Aug 1915. p. 6.
  11. "Daily Colonist". www.archive.org. 3 Sep 1949. p. 1.
  12. "CBP: Expanded Nexus Hours at Pacific Highway Port of Entry". www.cbp.gov. 17 May 2012.
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