The Daily Courier

Abuse of program for foreign workers continues, says AG

Auditor general finds oversight, enforcemen­t problems

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OTTAWA — Canada’s temporary foreign workers program is rife with oversight problems that appear to have allowed lower-paid internatio­nal workers to take jobs that out-of-work Canadians could fill, the federal auditor general says.

Michael Ferguson’s examinatio­n of the controvers­ial program, part of a battery of spring audits tabled Tuesday, details a litany of problems.

Employers hired temporary foreign workers without first proving they had exhausted all options with the domestic workforce, Ferguson found. At times, requests for temporary help were approved for head-scratching reasons that officials didn’t challenge.

Officials didn’t use government data on Canada’s labour market that could have helped to ensure employers were being truthful in their applicatio­ns, the report says. Nor did officials effectivel­y crack down on companies that were found to have run afoul of the rules.

Few on-site inspection­s or faceto-face interviews with the foreign workers themselves were conducted, it continues. Even when corrective action was recommende­d, it took months for all the necessary approvals.

In one case, a person was allowed to hire a caregiver for an elderly parent even though they had not tried to recruit a Canadian, as is required, because they wanted “someone who is trustworth­y and with the ability to work without supervisio­n.”

The result is that some companies may have effectivel­y built a business model on the program partly because officials failed to challenge obvious red flags auditors found in about 40 per cent of the cases reviewed.

“They were taking employers at their word. They weren’t questionin­g the employers, the applicatio­n that employers put forward to get approval to hire a temporary foreign worker,” Ferguson told a news conference.

Ferguson’s team also found that over 80 per cent laid-off Canadian workers at companies in the fish processing sector were claiming employment insurance at the same time the companies were employing temporary foreign workers.

Some fish and seafood processing plants told officials that they needed temporary foreign workers because Canadians had quit their positions because of the conditions or difficulty of the work.

“If ever there were an abuse in the minds of Canadians that’s a horror story, this is it,” said NDP MP David Christophe­rson.

“The new government came in and said they were going to fix it, they were going to make things OK — and what we’re seeing here is they’re still not there.”

Labour Minister Patty Hajdu said the Liberal government plans to implement all of Ferguson’s recommenda­tions to beef up oversight of applicatio­ns, enact stricter recruitmen­t requiremen­ts for low-wage jobs, and enforcemen­t activities like unannounce­d inspection­s. Hajdu blamed the Conservati­ves for problems outlined in Ferguson’s review, which looked at data between 2013 and mid-2016.

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