Toronto Star

Mexico hits pause on sending temporary foreign workers

Thousands being held back after COVID-19 deaths in Windsor area

- STEPHANIE LEVITZ

OTTAWA— Mexico won’t send any more temporary foreign workers to Canada until it has more clarity on why two died due to COVID-19, the country’s ambassador to Canada said Monday.

That means as many as 5,000 temporary foreign workers expected to arrive in Canada in the coming months are being held back, for now.

“It’s so we can reassess with the federal authoritie­s, provinces and farmers why this happened and if there is anything to correct,” Juan Jose Gomez Camacho said in an interview. The two men — one died this month and the other in late May — were employed by different farms in the Windsor, Ont., area, a farming heartland in southweste­rn Ontario that has seen ongoing outbreaks.

The outbreaks were cited Monday as the reason Ontario Premier Doug Ford said the region can’t follow in the footsteps of others and loosen restrictio­ns designed to slow the spread of COVID-19.

Ford was quick to say people shouldn’t blame the workers.

“They came here, they self-isolated for two weeks and they picked it up since they’ve been here,” he said.

“So I don’t want any finger pointing at these hard-working migrant workers. They’re good people, they mean well, and they’re hard workers, too.”

Gomez Camacho said across Canada, 300 Mexicans are believed to have been infected with the novel coronaviru­s.

His government needs assurances that the situation can be brought under control, he said, before allowing more workers to arrive.

He said agricultur­e firms reporting outbreaks are even asking Mexico to keep sending people, and “that will not happen.” But he said the pause is intended to be temporary, respecting the fact that farmers often need workers at specific times, and the government isn’t trying to spoil that.

“We are pausing this quickly now to understand,” he said.

The decision to hit pause is a further blow to the agricultur­e industry, which has been struggling to find enough labour to handle this year’s planting and harvest season, due in large part to the travel restrictio­ns in place to slow the spread of COVID-19.

Mexicans make up about half of the temporary foreign worker population employed in the agricultur­e sector, which in 2018 meant there were 25,060 people employed on farms, in greenhouse­s and other related jobs.

The dizzying array of government department­s charged with ensuring workers are being treated well is difficult to navigate at the best of times, and COVID-19 threw up even more challenges, Gomez Camacho said. But he commended the Canadian government for making what he called a “tremendous” effort to put protection­s in place to limit the spread of COVID-19.

Programs have been implemente­d at both federal and provincial levels to assist temporary foreign workers since the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic. They include money to cover the costs of mandatory isolation requiremen­ts as well as the purchase of personal protective equipment. Gomez Camacho said the Mexican government worked with Canadian officials to design some of those supports, including a provision that workers be paid while they were in isolation upon arriving in Canada.

 ?? GRAHAM HUGHES THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Mexico’s ambassador said 300 Mexicans across Canada are believed to have been infected with the virus. Mexico wants assurances the situation can be controlled before more workers arrive.
GRAHAM HUGHES THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Mexico’s ambassador said 300 Mexicans across Canada are believed to have been infected with the virus. Mexico wants assurances the situation can be controlled before more workers arrive.

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