New rules to
fast-track skilled immigrants to
Canada
Nov 29, 2008
Noor Javed
Nicholas Keung
Staff Reporters
If you're planning to move to
Canada, you'll have to check the list first.
Thirty-eight in-demand
occupations were unveiled by the Harper government yesterday,
setting out a new selection criteria for skilled immigrants,
allowing those with relevant skills to be fast-tracked into the
country.
The occupations include jobs
in the field of health, skilled trades and the finance sector.
Details of the long-awaited "ministerial instructions" were
posted on the Citizenship and Immigration Canada
website and come into effect
immediately.
Skilled workers whose
occupations are on the list will be fast-tracked for acceptance
as permanent residents under the skilled worker immigration
class. New applications that do not meet the eligibility
criteria will not be processed, and the application fee will be
refunded.
"Applicants who aren't
eligible for the federal skilled worker category may qualify
under another category,"
said Jason Kenney, minister of Citizenship, Immigration and
Multiculturalism, in a release yesterday. "There are many ways
to immigrate to Canada."
They include applying as
temporary foreign workers or through the provincial nominee
program under a job offer by a Canadian employer.
The controversial plan was
first introduced in March by then immigration minister Diane
Finley, as a way to reduce the backlog of 900,000 immigration
files and bring in the right skilled immigrants. Previously,
applicants faced wait times of up to six years. Under the new
rules, applicants should receive a decision within six to 12
months.
Olivia Chow, New Democrat MP
for Trinity-Spadina, who was an opponent of the controversial
immigration changes, says the list offers no real solutions to
the backlog.
"The government's solution is
throwing out the applications. It's absurd," she
said.
The list is also aimed at
responding to Canada's changing labour market and economic
needs. But Chow says the list has already become
outdated.
"It took the government all
these months to come up with these professions, and things have
completely changed in the last few months. People are being
laid off in the financial sector," she said. Financial managers
and accountants are on the list.
Ottawa consulted the provinces
and territories, employers, industry groups and academics to
come up with the list.
Kenney is confident the
occupation list is current despite concerns over the softening
economy. "It is difficult to project the consequences for
immigration as a result of the global economic crisis," Kenney
told the Star yesterday.
"There is no fixed schedule
(to update the list), but we will monitor and amend it as
necessary," he said.
Gurmeet Bambrah, with the
Council for Access to the Profession of Engineering, made up of
foreign-trained engineers, says such policies are
counterproductive. Of its 1,820 members, all of whom are
engineers, 60 per cent are underemployed or underutilized in
Canada.
"You can't keep bringing
people into the country you aren't going to employ," said
Bambrah. "Not only are they forced to go on to welfare, so they
are a burden on society, but it's also that you are killing all
their creativity," she said. "You have to go back and ask what
is the focus of your immigration policy, and why are you
particularly targeting these people?"
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