The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Up to one in three study-visa holders in Canada not in school

Statistics Canada analysis echoes findings of internal Immigation Department report

- DOUGLAS TODD POSTMEDIA NEWS

One in three people who entered Canada on student visas do not appear to have enrolled at educationa­l institutio­ns in the country, Statistics Canada reports.

A recent StatsCan analysis could find no indication­s that 30.5 per cent of people in the country on post-secondary study permits in 2015 were signed up that year at a Canadian college or university.

The StatsCan study, by Marc Frenette, Yuquian Lu and Winnie Chan, echoes the findings of an internal Immigratio­n Department report that revealed 25 per cent of would-be foreign students in Canada in 2018 were likely not complying with the conditions of their visa or were just not being monitored by school administra­tors.

The high no-show rate comes as there is a rising trend toward “edu-immigratio­n” to Canada. Many foreign nationals are being encouraged by immigratio­n agents to use Canada’s study permits to gain a relatively easy foothold in the country to find work, through which they can try to obtain permanent resident status.

Canada has a reputation as an unusually open country for internatio­nal students, especially in the way it allows newcomers to study part-time and hold down an almost unlimited range of jobs. Compared to Britain, the U.S. and Australia, Canada is known for having a poor record of tracking studyvisa holders once they’re in the country.

Vancouver immigratio­n consultant Laleh Sahba and immigratio­n lawyer Sam Hyman say it’s an unfortunat­e reality that many internatio­nal students are being told by dubious agents they can bypass school to work. But the immigratio­n specialist­s say such misuses shouldn’t overshadow that most internatio­nal students are using the system responsibl­y.

The number of study-visa holders in Canada has shot up by 73 per cent in four years, to 573,000 in 2018, with the highest concentrat­ion in Metro Vancouver.

Many officials welcome the hike in high-fee-paying offshore students. They maintain they enhance cultural diversity on campuses and boost the budgets of public educationa­l institutio­ns, which are not being funded by government­s as well as in the past.

In addition to articles published by Postmedia on loopholes in Canada’s study-visa program, The Toronto Star reported in November that many would-be internatio­nal students are routinely fail to pursue their studies, instead looking for work and applying for permanent residency.

Some get caught. Canadian officials revoked 5,502 study visas last year, an almost-fourfold increase from 2016.

The Globe and Mail also reported last month that many trucking companies, primarily in Surrey, are taking large illegal cash payments from foreign students in exchange for truck-driver jobs that might help them qualify for permanent residency. The trucking companies send many of the study-visa holders out on the road with no training, leading to deadly accidents.

Visa officials appear to be starting to respond to flaws in Canada’s burgeoning program: A growing number of studyvisa applicatio­ns, two out of five, are now being rejected , Postmedia reported this month.

Immigratio­n department officials have acknowledg­ed a tenth of all study-visa applicatio­ns are fraudulent, often because they use faked acceptance letters from Canadian institutio­ns.

One of the disquietin­g findings in the StatsCan report is that 2015’s rate was an improvemen­t over previous years: In 2009, only half of study-permit holders were signed up with a school.

When Postmedia asked Statistics Canada why such a large proportion of would-be foreign students appear to be avoiding studying, officials said the authors of the report were not permitted to directly answer Postmedia’s questions.

Although the report said statistica­l “noise” made it hard to precisely determine the ratio of non-compliant study-visa holders, a Statistics Canada official also acknowledg­ed: “We did not ask respondent­s their motivation for coming to Canada on a student visa. We only observed their work patterns.”

The study concluded that about one in four study-visa holders in Canada eventually gain permanent resident status. But beyond such data, the authors said, “Little is known about internatio­nal students in Canada.”

Hyman, the immigratio­n lawyer, says there is no doubt many study-permit holders come to Canada essentiall­y to work and not to study.

“Some work full-time in contravent­ion of the terms of their study permit, which limits them to working no more than 20 hours a week when school is in session, plus full-time during scheduled school vacations.” Some, Hyman said, obtain work “off the books for cash.”

 ?? JASON PAYNE/POSTMEDIA NEWS ?? It’s “unfortunat­e reality” that some study-permit holders are being told by dubious agents they can bypass school to focus on getting a job and permanent resident status, says Laleh Sahba, a registered Vancouver immigratio­n consultant.
JASON PAYNE/POSTMEDIA NEWS It’s “unfortunat­e reality” that some study-permit holders are being told by dubious agents they can bypass school to focus on getting a job and permanent resident status, says Laleh Sahba, a registered Vancouver immigratio­n consultant.

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