The Niagara Falls Review

Quebec immigrant doesn’t want welfare but system is flawed

Hugo Hernan Ruiz has struggled to find work despite being selected as a skilled immigrant

- GIUSEPPE VALIANTE

MONTREAL — Hugo Hernan Ruiz, a 42-year-old systems engineer from Colombia, has a master’s degree in his field and ran the IT department of an oil company in his home country.

His French is excellent considerin­g he arrived in Quebec in

2016 with little knowledge of the language. But like many highly educated newcomers to the province, Ruiz has struggled to find work despite being selected as a skilled immigrant by provincial authoritie­s.

After failing to find a job, he decided to open his own consulting business to take advantage of his South American contacts. He applied for a provincial program that assists budding entreprene­urs with grants, marketing and training.

But he was rejected because the program was for people who were on welfare or who had received Employment Insurance — and he fit neither category.

It would become a common refrain, he said, as he tried unsuccessf­ully to navigate the Quebec bureaucrac­y.

“I think there needs to be a reflection,” Ruiz said over coffee at a strip mall in the Montreal suburb of Laval, where he settled with his wife and two children. “What happens to immigrants who are trying to succeed and who don’t come here to live off the government?”

As Quebec Premier Francois Legault moves to reduce immigratio­n in order, he says, to ensure newcomers learn French and find work, Ruiz’s case highlights the obstacles and contradict­ions facing educated immigrants who are neither poor nor wealthy.

Yann Hairaud, head of a Montreal-based immigrant employment centre, said he knows of cases where skilled workers find options closed to them because they aren’t on welfare.

“Unfortunat­ely yes,” he said in an interview. “These situations can happen. There is a certain incoherenc­e in some of the rules that exist for newcomers.”

Shortly after Ruiz arrived in Quebec, he enrolled in a Frenchlang­uage program to study what’s known as the internet of things — the network of objects that contain electronic­s and can interact with one another.

“I thought that instead of taking French courses, I would take a French-language course in my field, so I would learn both,” he said.

He graduated with a vocational certificat­e last August — but because the government didn’t fully pay for his training, more doors were closed to him. A paid public-sector internship caught his eye, but to get it he had to qualify for a provincial salary subsidy.

He was rejected for the subsidy, he explained, because the government hadn’t paid for his training.

“I brought all my savings with me (from Colombia) and I prepared financiall­y in order to avoid asking for welfare,” Ruiz said. “I’m not criticizin­g the Employment Department or the government. But I think the country needs to reflect on whether the immigratio­n system encourages immigrants to go on welfare.”

Dominique Anglade, immigratio­n critic for the provincial Liberals, has not heard of immigrants going on welfare to land jobs, but she acknowledg­ed those on social assistance have a certain advantage.

Anglade, a former economy minister, said in an interview that “a high percentage” of immigrants fail to complete the necessary training to have their skills recognized in Quebec, in part because of the high costs involved.

“When you go on welfare, you do have some support that can help you actually accomplish finding a job and everything else,” she said. She blamed the discrepanc­y on government department­s not working hand in hand.

Immigratio­n Department spokespers­on Chantal Bouchard, said integratio­n “is obviously a priority” but referred questions about the obstacles facing skilled immigrants to the Employment Department.

Employment Department spokespers­on Vincent Breton did not respond directly to questions about whether people who are not receiving welfare are at a disadvanta­ge when seeking work.

“As you know, the Employment Department offers many measures and programs for those who want to integrate into the workforce,” Breton said in an email, adding that each file is analyzed on its individual merits.

Hairaud, whose organizati­on CITIM works with about 1,800 immigrants a year, said the Employment Department gives priority to certain groups, including those who are on welfare or unemployme­nt insurance.

Quebec seeks out skilled workers, he noted, but they are ineligible for government support programs if they are deemed too successful.

“It’s contradict­ory, the right hand doesn’t know what the left is doing,” Hairaud said.

Despite the difficulti­es, the employment landscape is improving for immigrants, partly due to Quebec’s strong economy. In August 2018, the unemployme­nt rate for immigrants between the ages of 25 and 54 fell to 6.1 per cent after hovering above 10 per cent for much of the previous decade, the Institut du Quebec reported.

Ruiz said he’s happy in Canada. His two young children are in school, and he wants to start a new life here. But he questions the value Canada places on the first generation of immigrants.

“My experience looking for work has been bizarre,” he said.

 ?? RYAN REMIORZ THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Hugo Hernan Ruiz, a software engineer who lives in Laval, Que., says he has trouble getting government help because he isn’t on welfare.
RYAN REMIORZ THE CANADIAN PRESS Hugo Hernan Ruiz, a software engineer who lives in Laval, Que., says he has trouble getting government help because he isn’t on welfare.

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