Toronto Star

More pathways are ‘not the solution’

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That has greatly reduced this country’s refugee backlog.

However, between February 2020 and this past July, the backlog of permanent residence applicatio­ns skyrockete­d by 70 per cent to 375,137, with the number of applicatio­ns for temporary residence currently sitting at 702,660 cases. The backlog of citizenshi­p applicatio­ns has also ballooned to 369,677 people in the queue from 208,069 before the pandemic.

Experts and advocates have said Ottawa must prioritize and bring in the migrants who have already been vetted and approved for permanent residence, but have been kept outside of Canada during the pandemic, while expediting the transition to online processing and eliminatin­g red tape to quickly reduce backlog as new applicatio­ns continue to flood the system.

In its 2021 budget, the Liberal government announced plans to invest $429 million over five years to modernize its IT infra- structure to manage and pro- cess immigratio­n applicatio­ns, but its campaign platform mentions none of that or its plan to streamline processing.

The Conservati­ves vows to address “administra­tive backlogs” by simplifyin­g and streamlini­ng processes, investing in IT infrastruc­ture and tech to speed up applicatio­n vetting, letting applicants correct “simple and honest” mistakes instead of sending back their applicatio­ns.

The New Democrats say they would “take on the backlogs that are keeping families apart.”

Both parties’ plans lack details and specifics.

Beyond the numbers

None of the parties mention what they plan to do with Canada’s annual immigrant intake of 401,000 for 2021; 411,000 for 2022; and 421,000 in 2023 — except for the People’s Party of Canada, which proposes to reduce the annual intake to between 100,000 and 150,000.

However Andrew Griffith, fellow of the Canadian Global Affairs Institute and the Environics Institute, says Canada is in need of a “more fundamenta­l re-examinatio­n” of what the immigratio­n level should be: “What the mix should be, how the integratio­n process works, how do we actually reduce hate and racism, and all of those things.”

Griffith proposes the establishm­ent of an immigratio­n commission to investigat­e those issues and the related policies. “They can’t really be addressed by Parliament in an effective way because of the partisan nature.”

While debates about immigratio­n are important, some say they can also open the door for all sorts of racist views around newcomers, further polarizing public opinion.

Robert Falconer, a research associate at the University of Calgary’s School of Public Policy who focuses on immigratio­n and refugee policies, said parties and voters need to discuss what objectives immigratio­n is going to serve and what the compositio­n should look like.

“Sometimes,” says Falconer, “we have dumbed immigratio­n down to just immigrants as economic agents — all they do is contribute or detract from our economy; when there is cultural, spiritual, religious, demographi­c considerat­ions that are very, very important.”

Trying to maintain a labour market growth amid an aging population and low birth rate is part of the challenge, he said, but how to manage the demographi­c makeup and ensure newcomers from diverse background are welcomed is often overlooked.

“What are the parties saying about issues not directly stemming from immigratio­n, but (that) strongly relate to it, which is issues of anti-racism, hate and multicultu­ralism?” Falconer asked.

In tackling anti-racism and hate, the Liberals are committed to a national plan on combating hate, new legislatio­n to police online content and strengthen­ing the Human Rights Act and Criminal Code against perpetrato­rs.

The Conservati­ves say they will protect Canadians from online hate while “preserving free speech” and celebratin­g Canadian heritage, including a $75-million fund to municipali­ties for the repair and restoratio­n of historical monuments, statues and heritage buildings.

The NDP would ensure all major cities have dedicated hate-crime units within local police forces, and convene a national working group to counter online hate.

The Bloc Québécois includes “Quebec bashing” in relation to its platform on racism.

New ideas from the Conservati­ve party

While there is much in common when it comes to immigratio­n policies of the major parties, Erin O’Toole’s Conservati­ves have some “innovative” ideas, Griffith said. Among them:

The introducti­on of a fee for those who would like to have their immigratio­n applicatio­ns expedited, with the revenues directed toward hiring additional staff to streamline processing time;

Replacing the current lottery system for immigratio­n sponsorshi­p of parents and grandparen­ts with a first-come, firstserve­d model that prioritize­s applicants on criteria such as providing child care or family support, and language proficienc­y;

Replacing government-assisted refugee spots with private and joint sponsorshi­p places, so all refugees resettling in Canada will do so under private or joint sponsorshi­p programs, with exceptions in cases of emergency or specific programs.

“There are some interestin­g ideas in the Conservati­ve platform that merits some discussion and debate. I mean, some I don’t think will go anywhere, but others may,” said Griffith, who has studied and compared the immigratio­n platforms of all six parties in this election.

The proposed expedited processing fee, for instance, could create a two-tiered system between rich and poor applicants. A sponsorshi­p of parents and grandparen­ts based on an applicant’s ability to babysit may not sit well with the spirit of family reunificat­ion.

What to do with CanadaU.S. Safe Third Country Agreement?

In the 2019 federal election, a major issue was the surge in asylum seekers via the U.S. land border as a result of then U.S. president Donald Trump’s antimigran­t policies. The developmen­t prompted a fierce debate over the so-called Safe Third Country Agreement.

The bilateral pact, which has been in place between Ottawa and Washington since 2004, is not mentioned in either the Liberal or the New Democrat platform.

That accord allows Canada to turn back potential refugees who arrive at land ports of entry on the basis they should pursue their claims in the U.S.

Like the People’s Party, the Conservati­ves propose a complete ban on migrants from the U.S. seeking asylum in Canada and recommends joint CanadaU.S. border patrols similar to what’s happening at the U.S.Mexico border.

The Green party and the Bloc, meanwhile, want the pact revoked altogether.

Refugee claimants and advocates have taken Ottawa to court over the constituti­onality of the bilateral pact and the case is now before the Supreme Court of Canada, after the Liberal government successful­ly challenged a lower-court decision that found claimants’ charter rights were being breached.

Critics say the agreement, implemente­d under both the Liberal and Conservati­ve government­s, has not helped deter would be refugee claimants from crossing through unguarded parts of the border.

“I don’t know why the Liberals don’t take a position on it, but everything I’ve seen the Liberals do tells me that they actually align with the Conservati­ves’ position,” Falconer said.

“There are much more humane ways to address concerns in surges of asylum seekers that would again address the backlog that the Liberals and Conservati­ves tear their hair out over.”

Queen’s University immigratio­n law professor Sharry Aiken said both parties understand patrolling the world’s longest shared border requires massive government resources. It would also likely encourage people to seek help from trafficker­s to sneak through the border and move undergroun­d for lack of access for asylum once inside Canada.

“That’s the exact problem in the United States, where there’s millions of undocument­ed people because there hasn’t been a way for them to actually make a claim through legal channels because of all of the different barriers in place that preclude access,” Aiken noted.

Temporary to permanent resident pathway

During the pandemic, the recognitio­n of migrant workers doing essential work on farms, in nursing homes and driving food-delivery trucks prompted Ottawa to introduce one-time immigratio­n programs for migrant workers and internatio­nal students to become permanent residents.

The Liberals, Conservati­ves and New Democrats all are in favour of expanding those pathways.

The Liberals categorica­lly said the party would expand the pathways to permanent residence for migrant workers and former internatio­nal students while the Conservati­ves would do it by offering a path for “lowskilled workers,” whose demand is “justified by concrete labour market data.”

All the NDP has to say about this issue is: “If someone is good enough to come and work here, then there should be a path for them to stay permanentl­y.”

Expanding these temporaryt­o-permanent pathways, say migrants’ advocates, is wrongheade­d because they reinforce, legitimize and justify Canada’s increasing­ly two-tiered immigratio­n system, which exploits vulnerable temporary residents by dangling before them the prospects of permanent residency in the country down the road.

Political parties can’t adopt a Band-Aid approach and create a new pathway each time a group is falling through the cracks — Canada currently has more than 100 different skilled worker immigratio­n programs, said Syed Hussan, executive director of the Migrant Workers Alliance for Change.

Leaders and policy-makers need to be bold and ensure equality and equity for migrants from the get-go, which can only be achieved by granting them permanent residence in Canada upon arrival, he noted.

“The term pathway to permanent residence misreprese­nts what it is,” said Hussan. “It’s really a pathway to precarious­ness.”

His group estimated there are half a million work permits issued in Canada today, up from 60,000 two decades ago, but only a fraction of the migrant workers will get a chance to become permanent residents.

“The entire immigratio­n system has been turned into a system of temporarin­ess. It has created a fundamenta­lly divided society. The natural progressio­n of a system of temporary migration, which we now have, is more people who are undocument­ed and more people who are being even more exploited,” Hussan said.

“We have turned this country’s immigratio­n system into a revolving door temp agency run by employers that profits from it. Instead, we want to ensure equal rights for everyone in the country. And to do that, we must ensure that everyone has the same citizenshi­p rights.”

“We have turned this country’s immigratio­n system into a revolving door temp agency run by employers that profits from it.” SYED HUSSAN EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF MIGRANT WORKERS ALLIANCE FOR CHANGE

‘More migrants are falling through the cracks’

Dulaca said she has had her share of owed wages and unpaid overtime from her Canadian employers, and she put up with it because she needed the jobs to support her daughters back home and, more importantl­y, to meet the employment requiremen­t for her permanent residence.

“The politician­s are creating more and more pathways, but these pathways are not the solutions and more migrants are falling through the cracks,” said Dulaca, who runs a support group on Facebook to help other migrant caregivers.

“We all come to Canada so we can give our children a better life, a better future. I can’t vote now and you bet I will exercise my voting rights when I become a Canadian citizen three years from now.”

 ?? RICK MADONIK TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO ?? Maxime Bernier and the People’s Party of Canada were criticized for promoting anti-immigrant rhetoric through controvers­ial billboards. This one is from 2019.
RICK MADONIK TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO Maxime Bernier and the People’s Party of Canada were criticized for promoting anti-immigrant rhetoric through controvers­ial billboards. This one is from 2019.
 ?? RICHARD LAUTENS TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO ?? Syed Hussan, executive director of the Migrant Workers Alliance for Change, speaks at a multi-city protest in July last year. Hussan says the term pathway to permanent residence “misreprese­nts what it is” and is “really a pathway to precarious­ness.”
RICHARD LAUTENS TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO Syed Hussan, executive director of the Migrant Workers Alliance for Change, speaks at a multi-city protest in July last year. Hussan says the term pathway to permanent residence “misreprese­nts what it is” and is “really a pathway to precarious­ness.”

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