Toronto Star

Syed Hussan, executive director of Migrant Workers Alliance for Change.

Non-permanent status blocking groups from CERB, health care

- TERESA WRIGHT

People are dying, not even to grow food, but to grow flowers and grapes for wine. Domestic workers are trapped in homes by employers who won’t let them out because migrants are seen as carriers of disease.

OTTAWA— Migrant workers and other non-permanent residents — many of whom have been working on the front lines of the COVID-19 pandemic — took to the streets in cities across Canada on Saturday, calling on Ottawa to grant them greater rights and protection­s. Temporary foreign farm labourers, care workers, internatio­nal students and undocument­ed workers who have been working throughout the pandemic as “essential workers” say they are being left behind by the Canadian government.

“Our people are literally starving. People are dying, not even to grow food, but to grow flowers and grapes for wine. Domestic workers are trapped in homes by employers who won’t let them out because migrants are seen as carriers of disease,” said Syed Hussan, executive director of Migrant Workers Alliance for Change.

“COVID-19 has exacerbate­d an existing crisis.”

Many migrant workers have fallen ill and cannot access medical treatment, while others have not received wage topups offered to other essential workers.

Meanwhile, migrant or undocument­ed workers and asylum seekers who have lost employment due to the pandemic are ineligible for emergency income supports such as the Canadian Emergency Response

Benefit, making them even more vulnerable.

It all stems from their nonpermane­nt status in Canada.

Canada’s labour laws, social services, health care and education systems offer different levels of access to non-permanent residents — a reality that advocates have long decried as intrinsica­lly unjust. The pandemic has now exacerbate­d those inequities and has placed migrant workers at significan­t personal risk, Hussan said.

“What we weren’t planning for is the absolute misery and chaos that would be caused in a public health pandemic,” he said.

Demonstrat­ions organized by the Migrant Rights Network were held Saturday in Montreal, Toronto, Vancouver and Halifax in front of offices of members of Parliament, including the office of federal Immigratio­n Minister Marco Mendicino.

Around 100 protesters plastered Mendicino’s Toronto office windows with posters of Juan Lopez Chapparo, Bonifacio Eugenio Romero and Rogelio Munez Santos — three migrant workers who died from the COVID-19 virus in June while working on Ontario farms.

Their demands to Mendicino and to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau were simple: provide full immigratio­n status to all migrants who are working in Canada.

Alina Przybyl, a member of Migrant Students United, says the struggles migrants face in

Canada are wide and vary from person to person, but that all migrants in Canada face a twotier immigratio­n system that favours the wealthy and privileged.

“I can’t speak for everyone but I think I can say that everyone (who has migrated to Canada) has a story like what we’re hearing here,” Pryzybyl said.

Participan­ts in the Montreal demonstrat­ion, which was attended by a few hundred people Saturday morning, held signs that read, “Status for all” and “We are all essential,” among others.

“It feels very sad that people who have been providing essential services to our society have been left behind,” said Elroy Ribas, a migrant worker from Mexico.

“One of the things that made me feel very proud about living in Canada is that people care. But in this context we haven’t seen that.”

The federal Liberals have said they are working on a program to grant permanent residency specifical­ly to asylum-seekers working in health care during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Many of their refugee applicatio­ns are in limbo due to a backlog at the Immigratio­n and Refugee Board and further delays caused by the pandemic, meaning their status in Canada remains uncertain in the long term.

But Hussan says the government should commit to regularizi­ng the status of all nonpermane­nt residents, not just a select few. “Everyone must have the same rights, the same protection­s. That’s only possible if everyone has the same status,” Hussan said.

Floriane Payo, an asylum seeker from Cameroon who came to Canada last year, joined the rally in Montreal on Saturday to demand status for herself and others who’ve been working throughout the COVID-19 pandemic who are not in the health-care sector.

Payo was working in a call centre in Montreal at the height of the pandemic in March and April, but the company closed temporaril­y in April, she said, after a worker tested positive for COVID-19.

It would be unfair for the government to regularize the status health-care workers only, she said.

“We too are essential workers,” said Payo.

 ?? RICHARD LAUTENS TORONTO STAR ?? Approximat­ely 100 migrants, refugees, undocument­ed workers and supporters staged a protest outside federal Immigratio­n Minister Marco Mendicino’s office in Toronto on Saturday.
RICHARD LAUTENS TORONTO STAR Approximat­ely 100 migrants, refugees, undocument­ed workers and supporters staged a protest outside federal Immigratio­n Minister Marco Mendicino’s office in Toronto on Saturday.

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