Lethbridge Herald

Ottawa to make pathway for newcomers who lack official status, speed up deportatio­ns

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Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says some immigrants to Canada who lack official status need a pathway to help them stay, while in other cases Ottawa must speed up deportatio­n procedures.

His comments come as advocates for gender and sexual minorities say the lack of a regulariza­tion program is leaving people without official status in Canada subject to exploitati­on.

“People who aren’t here regularly need to be supported and taken care of,” Trudeau told reporters Friday in Winnipeg.

“There needs to be either a pathway towards regulariza­tion and citizenshi­p, which I know the (immigratio­n) minister is working on. In some cases, we need to accelerate deportatio­n proceeding­s,”

The Liberals pledged in late 2021 to “explore ways of regularizi­ng status for undocument­ed workers who are contributi­ng to Canadian communitie­s.” Trudeau said he had no timeline for when this will actually be put into effect.

Immigratio­n, Refugees and Citizenshi­p Canada defines undocument­ed people as those who have overstayed a temporary visa, remained in Canada following a rejected asylum claim, or arrived in Canada without contacting authoritie­s

The office of Immigratio­n Minister Marc Miller said Friday he is on track to present a proposal to his fellow cabinet ministers before Parliament rises for its summer break next month.

“There’s a balance in making sure that the integrity of our immigratio­n system holds,” Trudeau said.

“That’s one of the reasons why Canadians are, unlike so many other countries in the world, continuing to be positive towards immigratio­n — because our immigratio­n system is rigorous.”

Immigratio­n, Refugees and Citizenshi­p Canada says there is no accurate count of how many undocument­ed immigrants reside in Canada, though it notes academic sources have estimated the number to be as many as 500,000 or as few as 20,000.

“Undocument­ed migrants live in fear of being detected and removed, and many are extremely vulnerable due to their very limited access to health care and social services,” reads briefing material the department prepared for November 2022 testimony to Parliament.

The Migrant Rights Network raised the issue Friday to mark Internatio­nal Day Against Homophobia, Biphobia and Transphobi­a, noting that gender and sexual minorities are disproport­ionately represente­d among foreigners who don’t have legal status in Canada.

Swathi Sekhar, a lawyer with the advocacy group Rainbow Railroad, said this is in part due to discrimina­tion within legal systems and volunteer groups created to protect refugees.

“There are LGBTQI+ people that are being deported to places where they may be killed,” she said at a news conference in Toronto.

“This kind of regulariza­tion scheme could literally be life-saving for many LGBTQI+ migrants who are in this country.”

The Immigratio­n Department has already run short-term pilot projects, such as a Guardian Angels program during the COVID-19 pandemic that allowed 8,500 pending and failed refugee claimants who worked in direct patient care, or their family members, to get permanent residency.

Another program for the Greater Toronto Area called the Public Policy for Out-of-Status Constructi­on Workers, had allowed 441 workers and 588 dependants to access permanent residency as of last August.

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