The Miracle

IRCC to repeal controvers­ial duration limit for temporary foreign workers

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Immigratio­n, Refugees and Citizenshi­p Canada has confirmed that it will repeal the cumulative duration regulation limit for temporary foreign workers next spring. Section 200(3)(g) of the Immigratio­n and Refugees Protection Regulation­s, also known as the “four-in-four-out rule”, denied work permits to foreign nationals who had worked in Canada for one or more periods totaling four years — unless the applicant met one of three exceptions. The Government of Canada introduced a temporary public policy in December 2016 that provided an exemption to the regulation, saying the cumulative duration regulation limit “disproport­ionately targets certain sectors of the economy due to its applicatio­n to lower-skilled and technical occupation­s in the Temporary Foreign Worker Program.” The public policy notice says the limit was designed “to prevent growth of a longterm temporary foreign worker movement of individual­s who are unable to transition to permanent residence,” but had become unpopular with Canadian employers. The regulation’s eliminatio­n was rec- ommended by the House of Commons Standing Committee on Human Resources, Skills and Social Developmen­t and the Status of Persons with Disabiliti­es. IRCC said in its public policy that “eliminatin­g the effect of the regulation now will prevent further disruption of the seasonal worker movement, encourage foreign workers to remain in status, and give more time to technical workers, who qualify, to transition to permanent residence.” IRCC says its temporary public policy will remain in effect until the repeal is implemente­d.

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