The Daily Courier

Canada wants new NAFTA deal to include easier cross-border movement of labour

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OTTAWA — Enhanced labour mobility is high on the list of goals for the Canadian government as it gears up for next month’s start of negotiatio­ns on a renewed North American Free Trade Agreement.

Ohio-based trade lawyer Dan Ujczo shares an anecdote that explains why:

A U.S. company was looking to make a “major investment” in either the Toronto area or Nashville, Tenn. The CEO had just decided Toronto would be the beneficiar­y when he was stopped at a border crossing by a Canadian border agent who told him he needed a work permit to enter Canada.

“The young woman said ... ‘You know, sir, it’s my job to save Canadian jobs, I can’t let you across,’” Ujczo recounts.

“And he said, ‘Young lady, you just lost yourself 300 jobs.”’

That, says Ujczo, is an example of “the real world consequenc­es” of antiquated labour mobility provisions in NAFTA.

“Companies, when they’re making those investment decisions, they want as streamline­d a process as possible. And when they’re saying, ‘Look, I’m not going to be able to get my talent across the border,’ boom! Why even deal with the headache?”

NAFTA is supposed to ease the flow of labour between Canada, the United States and Mexico. It eliminates the need for companies to do a labour market impact assessment to prove that a job being temporaril­y filled by an eligible American or Mexican worker can’t be done by a Canadian.

For business visitors, it eliminates the need for a work permit. For profession­als and intra-company transferee­s, it expedites the work visa process.

But NAFTA does not apply to all profession­als. It applies only to some 60 occupation­s, including doctor, dentist, lawyer, accountant, hotel manager, economist, engineer and scientist.

Many of the jobs most in demand today, particular­ly in the high-tech sector, didn’t exist when NAFTA was negotiated more than 20 years ago. Indeed, systems analyst is the only listed profession involving computers.

It’s a problem for manufactur­ers too, says Ujczo, who can’t move welders or tool and dye workers across the border to fill labour shortages or specialize­d employees needed to install, maintain and repair products sold to another country.

Moreover, NAFTA’s labour mobility provisions are inconsiste­ntly applied. The CEO in Ujczo’s anecdote, for instance, had crossed the border 19 times without a problem before being refused entry on his 20th trip.

“In our view, you can’t modernize the NAFTA and put in a new digital chapter and not address the movement of talent,” Ujczo says.

“It will be the biggest failure of the AFTA modernizat­ion if we don’t achieve this.”

 ?? The Associated Press ?? A server room at a Facebook data centre. Enhanced labour mobility is high on the list of objectives for the Canadian government as it gears up for next month’s start of negotiatio­ns on a renewed North American Free Trade Agreement.
The Associated Press A server room at a Facebook data centre. Enhanced labour mobility is high on the list of objectives for the Canadian government as it gears up for next month’s start of negotiatio­ns on a renewed North American Free Trade Agreement.

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