Montreal Gazette

Changes to PEQ program denounced

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Demonstrat­ors denounced proposed changes to a Quebec immigratio­n program that fast-tracks foreign students and workers, describing the reforms during several protests Saturday throughout the province as a dehumanizi­ng vision of immigratio­n policy.

The changes to the Quebec experience program are expected to come into effect soon and demonstrat­ors holding signs that read “A promise is a promise” and “Quebec is us, too” called on the province’s new immigratio­n minister, Nadine Girault, to act.

The experience program permits foreign students and workers already establishe­d in the province to quickly obtain a Quebec selection certificat­e to gain permanent residency. A new version of the program was introduced in May, following an ill-fated attempt to reform it last November that forced the provincial government to backtrack and apologize.

The new rules require internatio­nal students to acquire two years of full-time work experience, in addition to obtaining their diploma. For foreign workers, this requiremen­t is increased from one to three years and less skilled workers don’t qualify.

That was heartbreak­ing news for Carla Trigoso, a Mcgill University sociology student from Peru whose family went into debt to pay the $80,000 needed to complete her bachelor’s degree.

After four years of living in Quebec and her degree no longer enough, Trigoso now fears that her chances of finding work in the midst of a COVID -19 pandemic will be slim, not to mention that many jobs require permanent residency.

“We’re not just file numbers and permits,” she said, calling on Girault to show compassion.

Quebec Liberal Kathleen Weil believes the program she presented as immigratio­n minister under a previous Liberal government was “the envy of many jurisdicti­ons.”

“We had created this rapid immigratio­n route because we wanted to retain these talents,” she said, alongside several Liberal colleagues. “We are competing with the world to attract them.”

Weil said she’s torn up inside about changes being made.

“It is not a reform, reform is a progressiv­e concept,” Weil said. “We are regressing with this reform. We are not looking at human beings with all their potential.”

Québec solidaire co-spokespers­on Gabriel Nadeau-dubois described the changes as a “solution to a problem that does not exist” and simply a way for the Legault government to fulfil its electoral promise to reduce immigratio­n.

“It is the program that makes it easier to successful­ly integrate, in particular because it allows people who are already in Quebec to stay there,” Nadeau-dubois said. “But from the moment the CAQ begins to obsess over this number, they are forced to close as many doors as possible.”

Québec solidare denounced in particular the exclusion of less qualified workers — often in essential services that were key jobs in recent months as things shut down during the pandemic.

“The truckers brought the goods that fed Quebec during the pandemic, but with the new reform, these people will never be able to aspire to stay in the country permanentl­y,” said Andres Fontecilla, the party’s immigratio­n critic.

This was the case of Donalee Martinez, a trucker of Filipino origin who has travelled long distances for more than two years in the hope of being able to benefit from the program.

“Good enough to work, good enough to stay,” he told a downtown Montreal gathering.

Similar demonstrat­ions were held in Sherbrooke, Quebec City and Rouyn-noranda — an initiative of labour unions, student associatio­ns and migrants’ rights groups.

Last November, the Legault government was forced to backtrack after a reform proposed by former immigratio­n minister Simon Jolin-barrette would have seen hundreds of temporary workers and foreign students sent back to their countries because of a retroactiv­e tightening of the program rules.

They were also to include specific university and technical junior college programs in industries the government said were facing labour shortages.

The government has since dropped that limited list.

Girault, who is also internatio­nal relations minister, added the immigratio­n portfolio on Monday following a surprise cabinet shuffle.

An official in her office said it will take her some time to get up to speed on the reforms, expected to take effect imminently.

 ?? GRAHAM HUGHES/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Protesters hold up signs during a demonstrat­ion against changes to the Quebec immigratio­n program on Saturday.
GRAHAM HUGHES/THE CANADIAN PRESS Protesters hold up signs during a demonstrat­ion against changes to the Quebec immigratio­n program on Saturday.

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