Medicine Hat News

New data shows impact of immigratio­n system slowing sharply amid pandemic

- STEPHANIE LEVITZ

OTTAWA

New data is painting a stark picture of how the marked slowdown of the immigratio­n system due to the COVID-19 pandemic has affected thousands of lives.

The figures show that approvals for immigratio­n applicatio­ns fell by about three-quarters from the months before the country shut down to slow the spread of the novel coronaviru­s and after.

If there’s no change to processing soon, said NDP MP Jenny Kwan, a backlog is going to build that will take years to clear, leaving families split and new workers unable to come to the country.

And in turn, that will put the Liberals’ much-hyped plan to welcome 401,000 new permanent residents next year in serious jeopardy, she said.

“To suggest that somehow these levels numbers will become reality, they are absolutely being delusional with those targets,” she said.

The data was tabled in the House of Commons in request to a question from Kwan. It shows that between January and March 15, 81,963 people had temporary or permanent resident applicatio­ns approved.

Between March 16 and Aug. 31, a period twice as long, that number plummeted to 38,652.

At the same time, the number of extensions given to people with existing permits skyrockete­d: between January to March 15, 20,080 study permits were extended, and in the subsequent months 111,595 extensions were approved. Extensions for work permits and temporary visas also jumped.

The fact that so many extensions are being granted while new applicatio­ns are piling up needs to be addressed, Kwan said.

“I’m calling on the minister and strongly urging the minister to bring in a special COVID measure that will provide extensions, without further requiremen­ts from the applicants to have to renew,” she said.

If the government made extensions automatic, department staff could turn to processing new ones and avoid what could be a massive backlog that may take years to get through, Kwan said.

The data shows one appears to be building: in January, the department had an inventory of 405,375 cases and by the end of August that stood at 439,526.

Families are among those most dramatical­ly impacted as their applicatio­ns can’t be submitted online, Kwan pointed out.

The data shows that only 163 applicatio­ns for family sponsorshi­p were submitted between March 15 and the end of August. Kwan said that suggests files are likely piling up in mailrooms with no staff available to open them, so the real backlog could be much bigger.

In its response package to Kwan, the Immigratio­n Department noted that at the outset of the pandemic, its staffing capacity fell to 38 per cent.

Most government operations ground to a halt as civil servants across the country were sent home and overseas, many consular posts closed up shop.

The department said that as of the end of September, it was at 90 per cent capacity, including those still working remotely.

In announcing the government’s immigratio­n plan for next year, federal Immigratio­n Minister Marco Mendicino said work is underway to bolster the system.

“We are ramping up production, we are putting in the additional resources, we are putting we are leveraging technology becoming more digitally based,” he said Oct. 30.

“And we are ensuring that we have the flexibilit­y in our processes to ensure that there is a faster, more expeditiou­s outcome for people who want to come to Canada.”

In a statement Friday, Mendicino’s spokesman said the department is making major progress in getting applicatio­ns through the system, thanks to streamlini­ng processes where it can, giving resources for staff to work remotely and digitizing as much as possible

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