Penticton Herald

Front line to front of line for health-care workers

Nurses, orderlies and others offered shortcut to Canada and permanent residency

- By STEPHANIE LEVITZ and JILLIAN KESTLER-D’AMOURS

MONTREAL — Asylum seekers working on the front lines of the COVID-19 crisis are getting an early chance at permanent residency in Canada, but some advocates say the government’s plan will leave thousands of workers on the sidelines.

Immigratio­n Minister Marco Mendicino announced the program Friday in response to public demand that the so-called “Guardian Angels” — many in Quebec — be recognized for their work in the health-care sector during the pandemic.

Ordinarily, asylum seekers must wait for their claims to be accepted before they can become permanent residents, but the new program waives that requiremen­t.

To apply for residency now, they must have claimed asylum in Canada prior to March 13 and have spent no less than 120 hours working as an orderly, nurse or another designated occupation between the date of their claim and Aug. 14.

Applicants must also demonstrat­e they have six months of experience in the profession before they can receive permanent residency and have until the end of this month to meet that requiremen­t.

In an interview Friday, Mendicino called the announceme­nt historic, and a reflection of the fact asylum claimants put themselves at risk to contribute day-after-day on the front lines, in hospitals and in retirement homes, even without permanent status in Canada.

“They demonstrat­ed a uniquely Canadian quality in that they were looking out for others and so that is why is today is so special,” he said.

The new program was the result of negotiatio­ns between the federal government and Quebec, who have had a strained relationsh­ip on the question of immigratio­n, and in particular the asylum claimants, in recent years.

Quebec has housed many of the nearly 60,000 people who requested asylum in Canada after crossing on foot into the country from the U.S., the majority using an entry point in Quebec called Roxham Road.

The provincial government had long called for Ottawa to do more to stem the flow of people and also increase financial support to Quebec to deal with the new arrivals and the pressures they were placing on local resources.

But during the height of the COVID-19 crisis, when it emerged that refugee claimants were among those toiling in Quebec’s hard-hit long-term care facilities, public support began to build in favour of granting them special residency status.

Frantz Andre, a Haitian community organizer in Montreal who advocates on behalf of asylum seekers, said he had received calls from many people expressing relief that they now have a path to permanent status.

“I’m very happy with the decision the government took because it provides a lot of relief and comfort,” Andre said in an interview.

But, he said, the government’s plan is bitterswee­t because many front-line workers are still ineligible for regulariza­tion. “We’re not giving up yet,” Andre said. “We’re hoping we can influence the federal government and Quebec that they should enlarge their program.”

That was echoed by Wilner Cayo, president of Debout pour la dignite, a Montreal group that has pushed for the federal government to grant permanent status to all asylum seekers working on the front lines.

Cayo said Ottawa’s plan excludes thousands of asylum seekers whose jobs were deemed “essential” during the pandemic, such as cooks or security guards in Quebec’s long-term care homes, as well as labourers on farms and at food processing plants.

“We’re treating these workers like disposable products,” Cayo said in an interview. “Yes, we salute this first step in the right direction, but we are profoundly shocked by these workers who are deemed essential but are left on the sidelines.”

Quebec Premier Francois Legault said earlier this year that while he was grateful for the asylum seekers’ work, he was concerned that granting them fast-tracked residency status would encourage even more people to cross the border.

Legault said he did not know how many asylum seekers would be eligible for the regulariza­tion program. But, he said, he was happy his government could come to an agreement with Ottawa.

Exactly how many people would benefit from the program is unclear. Some reports have suggested at least 1,000 people could qualify.

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