The Niagara Falls Review

Feds to fund Ontario immigratio­n legal aid after Ford cutbacks

- ALLISON JONES

TORONTO — The federal government will spend $26 million this year on Ontario refugee and immigratio­n legal aid services after the province cut funding, the prime minister announced Monday, while taking partisan pre-election digs at the premier.

Premier Doug Ford’s spring budget slashed Legal Aid Ontario’s budget by 30 per cent, including eliminatin­g funding for refugee and immigratio­n law services. His Progressiv­e Conservati­ve government maintained that Ottawa should pay those costs because immigratio­n is a federal responsibi­lity.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said responsibi­lity for legal aid for immigratio­n and refugee cases has long been a joint federal-provincial responsibi­lity, but the Ford government “decided to step away from that.”

“The fact that we have to be here today to recognize that yet another Conservati­ve government, the government of Doug Ford, is walking away from services to the most vulnerable is really frustratin­g for me and I think for all Canadians,” Trudeau said.

Ontario’s attorney general had been asking Ottawa to foot the bill for refugee and immigratio­n legal aid, saying the Trudeau government’s immigratio­n policies have led to a nearly 160 per cent increase in refugee claims in Ontario since 2013.

Doug Downey said Monday that it’s unfortunat­e the federal government waited for several months before responding.

“I think the public will be naturally suspicious of the timing, right before an election,” he said.

Legal Aid Ontario had been spending about $45 million a year on immigratio­n and refugee services, with about 35 per cent of that coming from the federal government and the rest from the province. Downey said Ottawa was funding other provinces’ programs at 70 or 80 per cent. Ontario pulled all of its funding for the program this spring, leaving it with a shortfall.

A spokespers­on for federal Justice Minister David Lametti said the $25.7 million announced Monday was in addition to previously committed federal money for the program. He could not immediatel­y say what that amount was, but said with Monday’s investment it would make the program whole.

Trudeau said the funding is one-time money, but he will “engage in reflection­s” on how to ensure the program’s long-term sustainabi­lity.

Refugee lawyers applauded the announceme­nt.

“No one who is facing torture in a repressive regime, no woman who ran away from severe domestic violence in a country without protection­s, no LGBTQ2S individual who fled to save her life, should be subject to high-stakes legal proceeding­s without legal counse,” Maureen Silcoff, president of the Canadian Associatio­n of Refugee Lawyers said in a statement.

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