Medicine Hat News

Tech group wants new visa for skilled workers to enter country without a job offer

- TARA DESCHAMPS

TORONTO

A group representi­ng 150 of Canada’s fastest growing and most promising technology companies wants the federal government to pilot a new visa stream allowing high-skilled tech workers to enter the country without a job offer.

The visa proposed Thursday by the Council of Canadian Innovators would target indemand profession­s like software developers and data scientists, allow recipients to work, switch jobs or employers and help them extend their stay and attain permanent residency without needing to switch into another visa category

The idea is one of 13 the council included in a new report aimed at addressing the country’s critical shortage of skilled tech talent and helping startups compete against Silicon Valley giants and multinatio­nals.

“There’s over 200,000 positions in the tech space that are not being filled in Canada,” said Benjamin Bergen, the council’s president.

“At the onset of COVID, borders basically collapsed and the problem that we were seeing in terms of lack of skilled workers in the country was only exacerbate­d by the fact that foreign firms can now come into Canada and hire people to work remotely, increasing the pressures on the general labour market.”

On Tuesday, Facebook owner Meta announced it would hire 2,500 Canadians over the next five years with many working remotely.

They’re joined by Microsoft, DoorDash, Amazon, Google, Wayfair, Twitter, Pinterest, Reddit and Netflix, which revealed Canadian hiring plans during the pandemic, causing homegrown startups to fret about how they’ll compete with these companies’ big names and salaries.

The council sees changes to visa programs that would create pathways to permanent residency and better reflect emerging needs as key to helping Canadian companies deal with the labour market.

“Given how quick tech innovation changes, looking for a salesperso­n who has experience on X, Y or Z product, that happens to only reside in a specific jurisdicti­on often doesn’t apply for some of those programs, so we’re really pushing for an expanding,” Bergen said.

Immigratio­n changes could be accompanie­d by a “digital nomad strategy,” which the council envisions including clarity around taxes and length of stay for Canadians working remotely and internatio­nally and foreigners who locate to Canada for part of the year.

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