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Immigration news, information and guidelines!

Kashfool76

Full Member
Apr 30, 2016
39
7
Gloomier future seen for Canadian immigration
Experts call for ‘national conversation’ in view of challenges identified in government’s internal review. By NICHOLAS KEUNGImmigration report.

Thursday, June 2, 2016

With 35 per cent of male newcomers returning home and a growing middle class in developing countries less inclined to migrate, an internal government review is calling the future of Canadian immigration into question.

The report by Immigration Refugees and Citizenship Canada also points to the challenge of reconfiguring an immigrant-selection system in a rapidly changing labour market where a growing number of jobs are temporary and there’s “increasing mismatch” of available skills and the skills in demand.

“What changes, if any, does Canada want to make to its current ‘managed migration,’ ” asked the 23-page study, titled Medium-Term Policy: Balanced Immigration and stamped “for internal discussion only.” “To what extent is the current overall immigration level appropriate and/or necessary?”

With major changes made in the last decade under the former Conservative government, legal and immigration experts are calling on Immigration Minister John McCallum to have a “national conversation” on the future of Canadian immigration.

“Ottawa must take a step back to do a review of the whole immigration program and reach a national consensus in moving our country forward as a nation-building exercise rather than as an economic imperative,” said Debbie Douglas of the Ontario Council of Agencies Serving Immigrants.

“The Liberals have good political instincts and like to be seen as doing more on the immigration front. It’s the right time to take a look at what is working and what is not working in the system.”

The new government has already announced reviews of certain immigration programs involving temporary foreign workers and the Express Entry processing system, but critics say such reviews must be done in a holistic manner rather than a piecemeal fashion.

“This is the most thoughtful brief (on Canada immigration) I’ve seen in 10 years,” said Queen’s University immigration law professor Sharry Aiken. “It’s asking all the right questions that are useful starting points for a wide-ranging discussion of the future of our immigration system.





The internal report, obtained by the Star, also devotes attention to the estimated 2.8 million Canadian citizens — 9 per cent of the population — who live abroad, including a million people in the United States, 300,000 in Hong Kong and 75,000 in the United Kingdom.

Some 35 per cent of male immigrants to Canada return home, many within the first year. Between 1996 and 2006, the annual exit rate for citizens born in Canada was 1.33 per cent compared to 4.5 per cent for naturalized citizens.
“There has been a rather negative view of these expatriate Canadians, as they have been regarded as evidence of ‘brain drain,’ Canada’s lack of competitiveness in retaining high-skilled professionals and business leaders, and our insufficient success in integrating new arrivals,” the report noted. “Canada could choose to take a more proactive stance with expatriates.”

Measures implemented by other countries include: extending voting right to expats, providing non-resident representation in the national legislature, facilitating business and research networks, doing outreach to communities abroad to promote ties as well as creating tax treaties with other countries to facilitate work abroad.

The report also points to the greater emphasis the former Tory government put on selecting economic immigrants based on in-demand occupations in a so-called “project economy” marked by limited length of employment based on the duration of a contract or project.

“This environment makes it a significant challenge to target occupations and industries that are priorities for addressing through immigration,” it said.

While the report forecast does mean potentially lower immigration to Canada in the longer term, University of Toronto professor Jeffrey Reitz said global migration is still driven by “inequality” from poor to rich countries.

Although Ottawa introduced the Express Entry system in 2015 to let employers pick prospective immigrants from a pool of candidates to ensure newcomers are quickly employed, Reitz said the uptake of candidates outside the country has been small.


“Anything that improves the employment situation contributes to immigrant retention, but there is an aspect of retention in the family class. When you lose your job and you have no family, you move. A support group gives people a reason to stay,” explained Reitz, the director of ethnic, immigration and pluralism studies at U of T.

Hence, the immigration report raised the question over the strict differentiation of “economic” and “social” immigration in the current system, which channels applicants into the skilled and nonskilled streams.

“Regardless of how their application was accepted, immigrants make many contributions to Canadian society; economic migrants make social contributions; social immigrants make economic contributions,” it said.

“Given the somewhat artificial distinction between social and economic immigration, there may be grounds for giving greater weight to ‘non-economic’ criteria and on criteria related to the success of subsequent generations.”

Ryerson University professor John Shields said recent immigrants are caught up in the same “new economy” faced by young Canadians entering the workforce.

“All immigrants including the refugee class contribute to the society economically. They pay dividends economically in five, ten years as integration is a long-term process that can take a lifetime,” said Shields, whose research focuses on labour markets and immigrants.

“Recent immigrants and young Canadians face a different kind of roadblock from those who are already established in Canada. The issue we need to deal with is creating higher quality employment in Canada and educate Canadian employers of the values of one’s work experience from somewhere else.”

McCallum’s office declined to comment on the study but said the immigration minister is committed to improving family reunification, humanitarian efforts, citizenship reforms and creating economic opportunities through immigration.

“The minister is always looking at ways to make the system more fair and compassionate while making improvements to client services,” said Camielle Edwards, McCallum’s spokesperson.

“At the end of the day, the aim is to have an immigration system that contributes to Canada’s overall strength as a country and society.”
 

Kashfool76

Full Member
Apr 30, 2016
39
7
The Canadian Immigration Minister's message has the following quote that sticks out...

A key element of our commitment to reuniting families is reducing inventories and processing times. This is a challenge that will be every bit as demanding as our effort to resettle 25,000 Syrian refugees. I am confident that the lessons learned during our national project will help us meet this goal.


This is feel good quote, and if you compare the numbers for 2016-2017 it looks like they've basically reassigned people and resources to work on more Family class applications (I am looking at the Spouses/Partners/Children numbers).

From the 2015/2016 Plan:
2016/2017 planned spending - $21,164,097
2016/2017 FTEs - 181

From the 2016/2017 Plan:
2016/2017 planned spending - $21,551,176
2016/2017 FTEs - 231

So really they increased funding by only 1.8% and increased FTE count by 26%. It's a step in the right direction at least, but not anywhere near the "doubling" we might have expected.

The performance targets are missing from the plan and are "TBD", which would have indicated the quotas they have set for the program. Really though there should be no ceiling in my opinion. Also in the 2016/2017 document there are the planning highlights which seems to summarize their efforts...

Planning Highlights
•Continue to efficiently manage the inventory of applications and reduce overall processing times, especially for spouses, by managing intake for certain categories and managing the flow of applications to capitalize on where network capacity is available.
•Develop a plan to reduce processing times for family-class immigration in order reunite families more quickly and efficiently.
•Explore options aimed at waiving the two-year conditional permanent resident status for new spouses entering Canada.
•Restore the maximum age for dependants to 22 from 19 to better support permanent residents in bringing their children to Canada.
•Double the cap for sponsorship applications for parents and grandparents from 5,000 to 10,000 in order to reunite more families.
 

Kashfool76

Full Member
Apr 30, 2016
39
7
Government of Canada


Home Departments and agencies Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada News Notices
Notice – Government addresses spousal backlog and wait times


Ottawa, June 13, 2016 – As part of its commitment to family reunification, the Government of Canada will grant permanent residence to more spouses, partners and dependent children of Canadian citizens and permanent residents this year. This will significantly reduce the backlog of existing applications and speed up processing times going forward.

Each year, the Government sets how many permanent residents Canada intends to admit through its various immigration categories during the year. This is done with the annual immigration levels plan. The plan for 2016 reflects the Government's key priorities for immigration, which include bringing more families together.

This year, the Government increased the number of spaces allowed for spouses, partners and dependent children by 14 000, bringing it up to 62 000 spaces.

Over the past few years, more people have applied to come to Canada in the spousal category than there was space for in previous immigration levels plans; this has created a backlog. This year, the Government will reduce this backlog.

Tackling the spousal backlog will ease the uncertainty faced by spouses and partners wanting to move forward and build their lives in Canada with their family and help them integrate into our communities and our economy.

Increasing the number of admission spaces for spouses and partners is one of the measures the Government has taken to support family reunification. Through Budget 2016, $25 million was also allocated to support faster and more predictable processing times for family sponsorship.

What this means for applicants
Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) has begun to work on reducing its current spousal sponsorship backlog.

Reducing the backlog means complete and straightforward spousal sponsorship applications will be finalized faster.

The backlog reduction applies to applications received through the family class (overseas processing) as well as the spouse or common-law partner in Canada class (in-Canada processing).

All applications will continue to undergo the necessary screening to ensure that individuals do not pose a health, safety or security risk to Canadians and that the relationships are genuine.

If you have already submitted an application to sponsor your spouse or partner, IRCC may contact you to advise you if we need additional information to help process your application. You do not need to contact us, but please make sure your file is up to date.

If you are contacted, please respond to any communication you receive from us within the time frame provided in order to ensure that we can properly process your application. The success of our efforts relies on your cooperation.

If you have not yet submitted an application to sponsor your spouse or partner but plan to do so, the application will not be dealt with as part of our backlog reduction efforts, but it will be processed as quickly as possible.

IRCC's work to reduce the backlog will eventually benefit all spousal applicants—whether they are already in the backlog or submitting a new application—by bringing down wait times for all.

Find general information on family sponsorship, and find answers to your questions at the Help Centre.

Date Modified: 2016-06-13
 

Kashfool76

Full Member
Apr 30, 2016
39
7
thestar.com

Ottawa cutting spousal sponsorship backlog

By NICHOLAS KEUNGImmigration reporter
Sat., June 18, 2016
Ottawa has said “I do” to slashing the lengthy backlog for Canadians trying to sponsor their foreign-born spouses.

Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada will expand its annual quota of admissions for foreign spouses married to Canadians by 25 per cent to 62,000 in 2016 in response to complaints of a frustrating backlog and long processing time.

The department also announced this month it would prioritize the so-called “straightforward” cases involving foreign spouses and applicants who are already in Canada that were received before June 13.

It’s welcome news for applicants who now must wait 26 months if they apply from within Canada while overseas applicants face processing times anywhere from a year to 26 months in countries such as Pakistan.

According to the immigration department, as of June 1, the in-Canada spousal sponsorship backlog was estimated to be around 34,000 people, while the overseas backlog was about 48,500.

“Over the past few years, more people have applied to come to Canada in the spousal category than there was space for in previous immigration levels plans. This has created a backlog,” it said in a statement. “This year, the government will reduce this backlog.”

The department will start sending emails or letters to in-land applicants to ask them to provide documentation within a limited timeframe, so they can be processed as quickly as possible.

Based on prescreening, completed applications deemed “straightforward” will then be fast-tracked.

How officials define “straightforward” applications is still unclear, however.

“A straightforward application will be, for the most part, identified as one where there are no potential fraud concerns. In cases where there are potential fraud concerns, issues of concern will be carefully reviewed,” said immigration spokesperson Nancy Caron.

“IRCC is not able to share specific lists of criteria associated with potential fraud in the spousal program, as this would compromise program integrity.”

Caron said the success of the measures to meet the admissions targets and reduce the backlog will depend on the timely co-operation of applicants.