Regina Leader-Post

`IT'S BEYOND FRUSTRATIN­G'

DESPITE $1M PAYMENT AND QUEBEC APPROVAL,INVESTOR IMMIGRANTS LANGUISH FOR YEARS

- TOM BLACKWELL

Colombia's years of leftwing insurgency and drug-cartel violence are mostly in the past, but Leonardo Hortua Herrera still wanted a new life somewhere else for his family.

With his wife's love of the French language, they decided on Quebec and found an immigratio­n program they thought would make the move possible, and benefit their new home.

Hortua, an investment consultant for constructi­on companies, gave the province $800,000 in 2018 after passing the intense vetting process for its investor-immigrant program. He sent his son to college in Quebec and made plans to start a business there and buy a house in Gatineau.

But 4½ years later, the family is still in Bogota — and waiting. Despite its accord with Quebec, Immigratio­n, Refugees and Citizenshi­p Canada (IRCC) has yet to decide on the last and most crucial step in the process — providing permanent resident (PR) status here.

Meanwhile, Hortua held off on investing in new ventures at home in the hopes he and his dentist wife would soon make it to this country.

“Considerin­g that Colombia has one of the most devalued currencies, our dream of arriving, creating a company and buying a nice house is getting harder every day,” he said. “Over the years, that dream is now almost a nightmare.”

But Hortua's predicamen­t is far from unique. Lawyers who handle such applicatio­ns say numerous foreign citizens have made hefty investment­s and cleared Quebec's onerous approval process, only to wait years for word from Ottawa.

In fact, the wait time at the federal department for investors already approved by Quebec is 65 months — more than five years — easily the longest of numerous immigrant classes, according to the IRCC'S own website.

The Quebec program has approved less than 2,000 applicants a year since 2016-17 and was suspended entirely in 2019. Yet about 13,000 investors are still waiting today for federal approval, says the provincial immigratio­n, francisati­on and integratio­n ministry.

Not surprising­ly, those years in limbo are maddening for would-be immigrants who have handed a good chunk of their wealth to Canada, says lawyer Marc-andré Séguin.

“They have this impression that Canada is behaving like a crook,” he said. “They take this money, hundreds of thousands of dollars, and then they don't give anything in return ... It feels as if they're being defrauded by the government.”

Some tread a careful path in hopes of winning a positive decision. One American applicant who's been waiting two years for word from Ottawa backed out of participat­ing in this story after a Liberal MP he consulted warned that appearing in the media could hurt his case.

Mathieu Julien, a Quebec-certified immigratio­n consultant based in Mexico, said most of his clients have been waiting for years to get approval from Ottawa after Quebec accepted them as investor immigrants.

“Obviously they are annoyed,” he said. “They made the investment then they are just hanging and waiting for three to six years ... I just think that IRCC is overwhelme­d with the quantity of PR applicatio­ns they have to process. It got worse with COVID.”

IRCC, asked for comment Friday morning, was unable to respond by deadline Tuesday.

The Quebec investor program, suspended since 2019, is not without its controvers­ies. Evidence emerged in 2013 that as many as 90 per cent of the successful applicants gave Quebec their investment and within five years had moved to another province, often British Columbia. Critics called it a passport-for-money scheme that profited one province and led only to higher real-estate prices in another.

The federal government closed a similar program in 2014 and no other province has one.

But lawyers for later applicants say Quebec largely fixed those problems, with both the province and Ottawa now going to considerab­le lengths to ensure people put down roots in Quebec.

Séguin says many of his clients in the program have bought homes or businesses in Quebec, have children attending school there or plan to join extended family already living in the province.

There's even been a spike recently of Francophil­es in New York City anxious to settle in Quebec specifical­ly because it is French-speaking, he said.

Regardless, it's unclear if concerns over those earlier problems are causing extended waits at the IRCC, which has been plagued in recent years with lengthy delays.

The federal process was log-jammed by shutdowns during the pandemic, but “the backlog of requests and processing times have not been reduced as much as hoped,” said a Quebec immigratio­n ministry spokeswoma­n.

Under Quebec's program, investors hand over a sum that at the time Hortua applied was $800,000. It's invested by the province for five years, the income used to fund small and mediumsize­d businesses and pay for French classes and other integratio­n services for newcomers. It's then returned without interest. The amount rose to $1.2 million before Quebec put the program on hold.

But to first get approved by the province, prospectiv­e immigrants must provide arguably the most extensive array of documentat­ion of any such program in the world, says Séguin. That includes informatio­n on the source of all their income since graduation and certified French translatio­ns to accompany the paperwork.

Once approved by Quebec, IRCC then is supposed to conduct security checks and a medical evaluation to ensure applicants won't be a burden to the health-care system, before granting PR status.

That process once routinely took a year to two years, not today's 65 months, said Séguin.

Hortua said he and his wife were so convinced they'd gain PR status soon after Quebec's approval in 2018, they had their son attend an aviation program in the province, expecting to join him shortly. But not only did federal approval fail to come, the pandemic severely restricted travel.

“Imagine sending a 17-year-old to study in a strange country ... Your child is left alone (living in a private room) in the middle of a quarantine, where we all feared the worst.”

The positive news is that in response to an access-to-informatio­n request, IRCC said earlier this year the family had cleared security and criminal-record checks.

Still, it galls Hortua that immigratio­n wait times are longest for the Quebec investor class.

“The paradox is that this is the category where applicants are rigorously researched, the category that must give the most documents to both the province of Quebec and the federal government,” he said.

“It's beyond frustratin­g. It's very, very unfortunat­e that the IRCC has been silent for ... almost five years.”

 ?? NATIONAL POST FILES ?? The wait time at the federal department for investors already approved by Quebec is 65 months — more than five years — easily the longest of numerous immigrant classes, according to the Immigratio­n Refugees and Citizenshi­p Canada's own website.
NATIONAL POST FILES The wait time at the federal department for investors already approved by Quebec is 65 months — more than five years — easily the longest of numerous immigrant classes, according to the Immigratio­n Refugees and Citizenshi­p Canada's own website.

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