Waterloo Region Record

New hope for disabled migrants

Law must be brought in line with Canadian values, minister says

- Michelle McQuigge

A section of Canada’s immigratio­n law barring anyone from settling in the country if they have a condition deemed a burden on medical or social services is outdated and needs to be brought in line with Canadian values, the minister in charge said Wednesday.

Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Minister Ahmed Hussen said he’s committed to changing the rules currently spelled out in the country’s Immigratio­n and Refugee Protection Act and left the door open to the possibilit­y of repealing the controvers­ial section altogether.

Section 38-1C states that a person can’t be admitted to Canada if they have a health condition that “might reasonably be expected to cause excessive demand on health or social services.”

The Standing Committee on Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n is studying medical inadmissib­ility criteria for newcomers at the request of provincial and territoria­l ministers.

It has heard from numerous groups who argued the rules discrimina­te against people with disabiliti­es and should be scrapped.

Hussen appeared before the committee Wednesday, capping three days of hearings, and said the current rules in place for 40 years are in need of an overhaul.

“This provision needs to be changed. It’s simply not in line with our government’s policies with respect to moving toward an accessibil­ity agenda, but also with ... how Canadians are increasing­ly of the opinion that we should be more inclusive as a society,” Hussen said before the committee.

“I personally think this provision is out of date in terms of looking at those two things.”

Hussen was vague on exactly how the law might be changed, saying no decisions would be made without input from the provinces and territorie­s who bear most of the costs of health and social services.

He said, however, that repealing 38-1C was one of the options on the table.

Other options, Hussen said later Wednesday, would include exempting certain groups from the policy or increasing the financial threshold the government uses to calculate admissibil­ity.

Currently a person is generally found inadmissib­le to Canada if the government determines that their health and social service costs exceed $6,655 per year.

Hussen said raising that bar would have a significan­t impact.

“That option alone ... will eliminate 80 or 90 per cent of the people that are now captured by the policy,” Hussen said of the present setup.

A complete repeal is the route favoured by numerous groups who appeared before the committee this week. Among them were disability rights advocates who denounced the current system as “discrimina­tory” and “demeaning.”

The Council of Canadians with Disabiliti­es told the committee that antiquated notions about disabled people lie at the heart of the law.

The current rules are based on the assumption that a person with a disability is an inherent burden on society regardless of any other skills or qualities they have to offer, the council said.

A more modern approach, it argued, is to consider societal barriers disabled people encounter.

The council also told the committee that Section 38-1C flies in the face of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabiliti­es, which the government signed on to earlier this year.

It said the current system openly violates clauses such as Article 18, which affirms disabled people’s right to “liberty of movement, to freedom to choose their residence and to a nationalit­y, on an equal basis with others.”

 ?? ADRIAN WYLD, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Immigratio­n Minister Ahmed Hussen waits to appear before the Standing Committee on Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n in Ottawa.
ADRIAN WYLD, THE CANADIAN PRESS Immigratio­n Minister Ahmed Hussen waits to appear before the Standing Committee on Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n in Ottawa.

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