The injunction Dilkens has said he’ll seek Friday would expand police’s authority to respond to the protesters, the mayor said Thursday.
“I get that this injunction would be a single piece of paper, but it gives police more weight in the actions that they are prepared to take, and they will do what is operationally required to move people out,” he said.
If the protesters are “unwilling to move on,” the mayor said, tow trucks and equipment would be brought in to help “move the vehicles out of the way” to reopen the border crossing.
The blockades have slowed the movement of goods and caused production problems at car manufacturing plants along the border. Ford, General Motors and Stellantis have all announced production issues.
The bridge “is too essential to both of our national economies, and the livelihood of this border crossing puts — the importance of this border crossing puts — a lot of bread on the table for our families on both sides of the border,” Dilkens told CNN’s Laura Coates.
How officials are responding
Resolving the standoff is a delicate operation, Dilkens acknowledged. Forcibly removing the truckers could cause even more problems.
“It’s very frustrating because people just want us to go in and flush everyone out, and there’s a real threat of violence here. We’ve seen protesters come out with tire irons when the police attempted to tow a car. It could escalate very, very quickly,” he said.
“At the same time, going in and moving out 100 or 200 protesters — well, we could probably do that. What we don’t want to see happen is have 300 more show up tomorrow to replace the ones that were moved out. So, police are trying to negotiate.”
A company that could move the trucks also has been threatened, said the city’s police chief, Peter Sloly.
“At least one of the major tow trucks (company) that would have been able to supply us with the logistics to tow illegal vehicles and to a significant degree reduce the size of the demonstrations has been threatened themselves,” he said. “They have been threatened through some sophisticated online activities and direct threats to harm to their employees and their business.”
Authorities might try other options, Sloly added. “We are considering other methods that may allow us to not need to use tow trucks to the extent we initially thought,” he said. “All options are on the table.”
A criminal investigation into the threats is underway, Sloly said.
What the protesters are demanding
The protesting truckers represent a vocal minority among their profession and fellow citizens.
Dylan Friesen, a protester in Ottawa, was let go from a job at a transport company in Ontario for not taking the Covid-19 vaccine, he told CNN.
“That’s not right for companies be able to decide that and take away our right to earn money and support our livelihood,” Friesen said.
Samuel Gauthier, who supports the demonstrators, is unvaccinated, which has prevented him accessing certain businesses in his home province of Quebec, he told CNN.
“I can’t go skiing, I can’t go to Walmart, I can’t go to Canadian Tire, I can’t go to Home Depot, I can’t go to restaurants, I can’t go to bars, I can’t go to the gym,” Gauthier said, noting restrictions in Quebec have been “a bit more intense than in other places in Canada.”
The protesters’ many different requests make the negotiations tricky, Dilkens said.
“I would call them a leaderless group, and frankly, the requests that these folks have, they are not unified,” he said. “There are folks here protesting government, like you’d see at a G-7 or G-20 protest. There are folks that are protesting climate change initiatives, and there are some folks who protesting vaccine mandates.”
Meanwhile, officials are pressing demonstrators to stop blocking the critical pathways.
“I’ve said consistently, we welcome the freedom of people to protest lawfully and peaceful, but this is not a lawful protest,” Alberta Premier Jason Kenney said during a news conference this week.
CNN’s Paradise Afshar, Josh Campbell, Tanika Gray, Jason Hanna, Chris Isidore, Chuck Johnston, Paul P. Murphy, Donie O’Sullivan, Raja Razek and Geneva Sands contributed to this report.