Times Colonist

Where is the money coming from for provinces’ offers, expert asks

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VANCOUVER — As British Columbia joined other provinces Tuesday in pledging support for displaced Syrians, an immigratio­n expert said calls for Canada to accept more refugees fail to address the crucial question of who would foot the bill.

University of Toronto sociology professor Monica Boyd said such requests amount to asking the federal government to pay the tab — about $35,000 per refugee family in the first year.

But the topic of funding is absent from the discussion taking place publicly between a growing list of provinces and Ottawa, she noted.

“They’re having a conversati­on in the middle of a marshmallo­w,” said Boyd, the Canada Research Chair in Immigratio­n, Inequality and Public Policy. “What that means is there are certain things that aren’t being said, namely: ‘Where’s the money coming from?’ ”

Under current regulation­s, provinces are legally not allowed to sponsor refugees — only the federal government and private citizens have that power. But that hasn’t stopped provinces from chiming in with announceme­nts ranging from demands to boost immigratio­n numbers to provincial funding for refugee support programs.

On Tuesday, Premier Christy Clark announced a $1-million “readiness fund” to help refugees from war-torn Syria settle in B.C. The one-time investment is to provide trauma counsellin­g, assist profession­al associatio­ns to recognize foreign credential­s, support jobplaceme­nt programs and help private sponsors navigate the refugee-sponsorshi­p process.

On Monday, Quebec announced it was prepared to take in 3,650 Syrian refugees by the end of the year — 2,450 more than initially planned. The province promised $29 million to assist in that effort, with most of the money going toward language training, job aid, education and health care.

Late last week, Ontario called on the federal government to accept 5,000 Syrian refugees by the end of 2015, while Manitoba committed $40,000 to help settlement service providers accommodat­e hundreds of additional refugees in the coming months.

“The provinces are saying, ‘Listen, we can support a lot more than what you’re currently bringing in. We can absorb these people. We have the transporta­tion infrastruc­ture; we have the schooling infrastruc­ture; we have assisted housing infrastruc­ture,’ ” Boyd said.

“[The provinces] are not saying: ‘We will pay for these individual­s to come,’ and in part they can’t because that is not their political mandate.”

During Tuesday’s announceme­nt in Vancouver, Clark emphasized that it wasn’t British Columbia’s job to decide refugee-admission numbers.

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