❓WHAT HAPPENED: The Trump administration announced the closure of a key road connecting the U.S. and Canada to enhance border security.
👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: The Trump administration, Alberta officials, and the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS).
📍WHEN & WHERE: The nine-mile Border Road, connecting Montana and Alberta, will close on July 1.
💬KEY QUOTE: “Regardless of the line on the map, you’ll have farmers on both sides of the border, you’ll have family friends on both sides of the border. I think obviously that will continue.” – Alberta Transportation Minister Devin Dreeshen
🎯IMPACT: The closure ends 80 years of free movement, impacting farming communities and prompting Alberta to plan a replacement road.
The Trump administration has announced the closure of the nine-mile Border Road, which connects Montana and Alberta, Canada, effective July 1. The move is part of broader efforts to tighten U.S. border security and address concerns about smuggling and unauthorized crossings.
Notably, the closure marks the end of over 80 years of free movement along this stretch of highway, which has been a vital link for farming communities on both sides of the border. While the Trump administration has not commented directly on the Border Road closure, the decision aligns with the President’s previous commitments to enhance border security. In 2025, Trump highlighted concerns over fentanyl trafficking, noting that seizures at the northern border had increased, though they remained lower than those at the southern border.
“Regardless of the line on the map, you’ll have farmers on both sides of the border, you’ll have family friends on both sides of the border. I think obviously that will continue,” Alberta, Canada’s Transportation Minister Devin Dreeshen stated regarding the closure. He added that the provincial government has been working with the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) regarding the closure, with Alberta allocating an estimated $8 million in Canadian dollars ($5.74 million U.S.) to alter area roadway infrastructure for continued use.
The National Pulse reported last April that President Trump’s imposition of stricter border security measures led to a 95 percent drop in illegal crossings along the U.S.-Canadian border. This reduction followed a series of tariff threats and negotiations between the two nations, which saw Canada eventually commit additional resources to help halt fentanyl trafficking and boost border security infrastructure.
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