A decision by the Trump administration to lift protected status for thousands of Haitians doesn't appear to have prompted a new surge of asylum seekers at the Canada-U-S border.
New data shows the R-C-M-P stopped 1,623 people in November -- down from 1,890 in October.
But while the number of border crossers is down since a summer surge, the number of people stopped in those two months is more than the R-C-M-P stopped in all of 2016, suggesting a major outreach effort by the Liberals hasn't entirely stemmed the tide.
Just 2,500 people were apprehended coming into Canada between official ports of entry last year, compared with 18,615 so far this year.
In August, Mounties had stopped over 5,000 people in Quebec alone as they crossed into Canada to seek asylum.
Many were believed to be propelled north by an impending change to U-S policy that would see deportations to Haiti resume following a pause instituted after the 2010 earthquake.