Journal Pioneer

Making the jounrey

Some undocument­ed U.S. migrants approved for temporary Canadian visas

- BY TERESA WRIGHT

Elidee Sanchez says her nightmares about her harrowing journey crossing the Mexico-U.S. border finally came to an end the day she arrived - legally - in Canada.

After spending 17 years living in the United States as an undocument­ed migrant, she was in an almost constant state of anxiety. She had no legal status in a country that has been developing an increasing­ly hostile view of “illegal” migrants.

But last August, Sanchez drove across the Blue Water Bridge that connects Port Huron, Mich., with Sarnia, Ont. and was granted legal entry into Canada, thanks to a successful applicatio­n for a Canadian study visa despite her undocument­ed status.

“That’s the first time I’ve ever had a stamp in my passport,” she exclaimed to the border security officer as she crossed.

It was a milestone in Sanchez’s life that her immigratio­n lawyer, Vanessa Routley, said would not have happened three years ago. As an undocument­ed migrant living for so many years illegally in the United States, her applicatio­n for a temporary Canadian visa would likely have been denied, Routley said.

“In the past, if someone had failed to comply with the regulation­s in another country, Canada was not willing to take a chance on them, to admit them and to ask them to follow our rules,” Routley said.

But over the last few years the Canadian government might have quietly revised its approach to some of these applicatio­ns. “There was a low-level rumour circulatin­g that it’s possible to bring these people in both for study permits and job offers,” Routley said, which is why she moved forward with Sanchez’s applicatio­n. She said she would not have taken the case in the past, given the low probabilit­y of success.

“I knew there was a chance that (Sanchez) could be refused, but there seemed to be a new willingnes­s on the part of Immigratio­n, Refugee and Citizenshi­p Canada to give preferenti­al treatment to people who would otherwise do an irregular (border) entry, but were clearly trying to comply with the regulation­s and do it through legal pathways.” Routley had had success with another client, who also was living in the U.S. undocument­ed. He was able to use his unofficial work history in the U.S. to support his applicatio­n for a temporary work visa in Canada. She said she has heard of other similar cases from 2017 from other lawyers.

The Immigratio­n Department said there has been no official change in the requiremen­ts for temporary Canadian visas and would not comment on individual cases, citing privacy laws. The department did say each applicatio­n is considered on the specific facts presented by the applicant.

As long as they show the applicant is not criminally inadmissib­le, is in good health, can financiall­y support him- or herself and has all the required paperwork, and he or she agrees to leave the country when the visa expires, the applicant can be granted access to Canada.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? A couple is backlit by a street lamp as they stand in a park near the U.S. border wall in Tijuana, Mexico, last year.
CP PHOTO A couple is backlit by a street lamp as they stand in a park near the U.S. border wall in Tijuana, Mexico, last year.

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