The Niagara Falls Review

Quebec sweetens pot to get migrants to learn French

- GIUSEPPE VALIANTE

MONTREAL — Quebec announced tens of millions of new dollars Friday aimed at getting more newcomers to learn French.

One of the Coalition Avenir Québec’s pitches to get elected last fall was to temporaril­y reduce immigratio­n and ensure the newcomers who are accepted can integrate by learning the province’s only official language.

Not only are French classes free for immigrants in Quebec, but the state pays them to take the courses. It also subsidizes daycare costs for immigrant parents who study French.

Immigratio­n Minister Simon Jolin-Barrette told reporters Friday he’s sweetening the pot to gently push more newcomers to register for courses.

His department will spend an extra $70 million a year, he said, to create 300 new classes, hire 80 more teachers, and increase the weekly stipend for people who take full-time courses from $141 to $185.

Immigrants who take parttime French will now receive $15 a day, up from nothing.

“Your government is showing beyond any doubt its determinat­ion and its desire to reform the immigratio­n system,” Jolin-Barrette said at a news conference. “The government of Quebec is very serious in its approach … the knowledge of French by immigrants ensures the success of all of society.”

Absent in the minister’s announceme­nt was the other, less generous component of the government’s immigratio­n strategy. The Coalition also ran last fall on a promise to refuse residency certificat­es to those who fail a French-language test within three years of arriving.

Obtaining that document, known as the Certificat de sélection du Québec, is essential to receiving permanent residency status by the federal government.

Quebec adopted Bill 9 before the summer recess, creating a legal framework allowing the province to be more restrictiv­e regarding who gets to come to Quebec and who gets to stay. Bill 9 didn’t include specific regulation­s about the promised Frenchlang­uage tests and the government has yet to announce them.

Jolin-Barrette said state-subsidized French classes will now be accessible to all immigrants, regardless of how long they have been in the province. Before Friday’s announceme­nt, newcomers weren’t eligible for free classes after five years.

The classes will now be offered to temporary foreign workers and foreign students — as well as their spouses. Daycare subsidies for part-time French students will increase from $7 to $9 per day, per child. The money given to parents taking full-time courses remains the same, at $25 per day per child.

Jolin-Barrette estimated about 4,500 more immigrants a year will take advantage of the free classes.

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