The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Canada to overhaul foreign worker program

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WINNIPEG — Canada is overhaulin­g its temporary foreign worker program, a government spokeswoma­n says, after coronaviru­s outbreaks on Ontario farms sickened hundreds and led Mexico to demand assurances of proper safeguards.

As part of the review, surprise inspection­s of working and living conditions on farms will immediatel­y increase, Ashley Michnowski, communicat­ions director for Canada’s employment minister, said. Other changes are being developed, she said.

At least 17 Ontario farms have seen outbreaks. Two Mexican workers died after contractin­g the virus.

Migrant workers cited a litany of concerns, including cramped, decrepit housing and being forced to work while awaiting COVID-19 test results, according to a report this month by Migrant Workers Alliance for Change.

Canada’s review of the program was first reported in the Globe and Mail newspaper.

Mexico’s labour ministry has warned it will stop sending temporary workers to Canadian farms with outbreaks that do not have proper worker protection­s.

Canadian farmers rely on 60,000 temporary foreign workers, mainly from Latin America and the Caribbean, to plant and harvest crops.

“The piece that’s missing is enforcemen­t,” said Santiago Escobar, national representa­tive of Agricultur­e Workers Alliance, an associatio­n that represents non-unionized migrant workers.

Another factor contributi­ng to the outbreaks may be a patchwork of housing standards. In Ontario, they vary by municipali­ty, while other provinces set standards themselves, said Beth Connery, a Manitoba vegetable farmer and chair of the Canadian Horticultu­ral Council’s labour committee.

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