5,500 Miles of Common Border …

… and heat treating a few million pallets is going to stop the spread of insects across the Canada – United States Border. Really? No wonder the CTA takes no position on the science behind the decision to eliminate the exemption that allows wood packaging materials (WPM) crossing the Canada-US border to bypass heat treating and marking requirements — because there is no science. Insects don’t respect borders. Heat treating a few million pallets is not going to stop the spread of insects across the border. Trust me.

As per this recent article in Canadian Manufacturing, all removal of the exemption will do is disrupt border crossing because it’s going to take quite a while to individually check Three Hundred and Twenty (320) Million pallets to find the millions that don’t meet the requirement. So while it’s not necessarily a bad idea, since an insect-laden pallet could accidentally find its way to a foreign country and introduce a foreign bug to the local ecosystem that could be harmful, like the CTA says, elimination of the exemption (and subsequent enforcement) shouldn’t begin until APHIS and CFIA, working with industry, are satisfied that there are enough WPM compliant pallets in circulation to meet the demands of Canada-US trade. Otherwise, we’ll have lineups at the border from Detroit to Toronto (which is about 244 miles), and that won’t help anyone.