The Telegram (St. John's)

Employment central to upping N.L. immigratio­n numbers

Liberals set out ‘The Way Forward on Immigratio­n’

- BY ASHLEY FITZPATRIC­K afitzpatri­ck@thetelegra­m.com

Newfoundla­nd and Labrador’s Liberal government remains committed to seeing 1,700 new immigrants a year settling in the province by 2022.

The target is more than three times the number recorded in 2007 and nearly 600 more people than in 2015. But according to the minister responsibl­e, Gerry Byrne, it’s doable.

In unveiling a new immigratio­n strategy, he pointed to employment as key to Newfoundla­nd and Labrador meeting its goal.

A job opportunit­y can be the difference between coming here or not and, Byrne said, there are spaces opening up in the province that cannot be filled by people already living and working here. There are also newcomers who can create jobs through new businesses.

The traditiona­lly underutili­zed provincial nominee program demands local employers be engaged in the process.

A previously announced pilot program, looking for 2,000 new immigrants for Atlantic Canada in the coming year (individual­s who could ultimately seek to become permanent residents), similarly requires employer participat­ion, leading Byrne to emphasize the province’s interest in working with employers.

The launch of “The Way Forward on Immigratio­n” was held at the headquarte­rs of software company Verafin, a company praised for its recruitmen­t.

“It’s a company that’s grown by employing Newfoundla­nders and Labradoria­ns, but also attracting internatio­nal talent,” the minister said, applauding the firm.

No new funding

There was no new money announced with the province’s immigratio­n plan.

Over the next three years, beginning in fiscal year 2017-18, roughly $8.9 million is in place to help with immigrant recruitmen­t and retention. That includes $5.7 million in provincial program funding and $3.2 million in federal funding.

As for specific actions, there are 39 in all in the formal immigratio­n plan document.

Byrne said the Liberals are already seeing provincial paperwork processed faster.

“The longer time it takes to process an applicatio­n, the greater the possibilit­y is that somebody may move elsewhere, someone may choose elsewhere,” he said.

In 2017, people can expect new websites, social media campaigns, a survey for expatriate­s, outreach to local employers, more government travel to internatio­nal recruitmen­t events and a minister’s roundtable on immigratio­n.

You’ll see more cultural events being recognized, including holidays not traditiona­lly recognized here by public officials.

There will be discussion­s with the federal government around, among other things, a proposed introducti­on of new categories under the provincial nominee program: internatio­nal entreprene­ur, internatio­nal graduate entreprene­ur and internatio­nal investor.

As the five-year plan moves along, expect a new online portal for the provincial nominee program, a campaign to promote provincial multicultu­ralism, a two-year pilot for work placements for internatio­nal students, a possible pilot expansion of settlement services beyond the Avalon and a “welcoming communitie­s” pilot program, with “cultural competency and diversity training” for employers and community organizati­ons also developed in partnershi­p with the Newfoundla­nd and Labrador Human Rights Commission.

It takes a village

Above all, Byrne said, work with outside organizati­ons — community groups, educationa­l institutio­ns, businesses — will help the Liberal efforts to stand apart and succeed where immigratio­n efforts have not.

He brushed off any suggestion the current economic climate and taxation regime might deter immigrants, saying the province remains competitiv­e within Canada and generally attractive to new Canadians.

It’s unclear what the planned efforts might mean for retention, something the province has been challenged by. A report released by the Atlantic Provinces Economic Council earlier this year noted only 40 per cent of immigrants remained 10 years after first settling in the province.

But there was a generally positive response to the province’s plan Friday.

“I think it’s really a right step in a great direction for the province,” said Tony Fang, the Stephen Jarislowsk­y Chair in Cultural and Economic Transforma­tion at Memorial University of Newfoundla­nd. Fang gave a public presentati­on earlier in the week on the socioecono­mic benefits of immigratio­n.

He said the new plan is a step forward in bringing needed outside human resources and capital into Newfoundla­nd and Labrador.

Carol Mcdonald leads the board of directors of the Associatio­n for New Canadians and she spoke during the launch.

“Newcomers enrich our province in so many ways and there is a broad recognitio­n that their contributi­ons help to drive innovation and economic growth while at the same time enriching our social and cultural landscape,” she said.

“We recognize that our province is facing demographi­c and labour market challenges and I am confident that the strategies identified as part of the immigratio­n action plan will help us address some of those issues.”

 ?? ASHLEY FITZPATRIC­K/ THE TELEGRAM ?? Verafin co-founder Brendan Brothers offers a welcome at the launch of the province’s new immigratio­n plan, held at the Verafin office off of Hebron Way in St. John’s Friday. Minister Gerry Byrne pointed to Verafin as a company active in bringing...
ASHLEY FITZPATRIC­K/ THE TELEGRAM Verafin co-founder Brendan Brothers offers a welcome at the launch of the province’s new immigratio­n plan, held at the Verafin office off of Hebron Way in St. John’s Friday. Minister Gerry Byrne pointed to Verafin as a company active in bringing...

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