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Up to date on Immigration News

avaaz

Newbie
Nov 24, 2012
6
0
Hi there! :D This is my first post! I love this forum! I've learned a lot from reading your posts.

There is so much happening in immigration, that it's become hard to keep up with all the changes. I wanted to request if people would share their immigration news sources here.

Here is a list of a few that I follow through email/facebook/twitter/google+:

cicsnews.com
cicnews.com/
cic.gc.ca/english/department/media/releases/2012/index.asp
canadavisa.com/news/latest.html

I also try to follow Minister Kenney's twitter, but I rarely see anything of substance except for the occasional time.

Any more information would be greatly appreciated!
 

Canadda13

Member
Nov 25, 2012
15
0
Job Offer........
Pre-Assessed..
I also joined the group today, so lets hope that we learn and contribute a lot in this forum
 

avaaz

Newbie
Nov 24, 2012
6
0
From CICSNews.com

In an interview on Saturday with the Globe and Mail, Canada’s largest national newspaper, Prime Minister Stephen Harper expounded in length on his vision for Canada’s immigration programs.

He told the Globe that competition for skilled international workers would heat up over the coming years, as “the demographic changes .. the aging population, start to bite, in many developed countries”.

He trumpeted his government’s achievements in reforming what he called the old “passive pro-immigration policy” which “operated on receiving applications and processing them in order” and had left his government with “backlogs of hundreds and hundreds of thousands of applications”.

He said his government is trying to shift to an “activist policy” where Canada goes out and recruits the immigrants it needs, and when it receives applications, “prioritize them to the country’s objectives.”

The Prime Minister said that as the rest of the developed world increases its immigration intake, Canada would need the activist immigration policy to “compete, and make sure we get the immigrants both in terms of volumes and particular attributes: skills, expertise and investment capacity.”

Under the Conservative government, Citizenship and Immigration Canada (CIC) has legislatively wiped out the 280,000 application Federal Skilled Worker (FSW) program backlog, and frozen acceptance of new applications under both the FSW program and the Federal Immigrant Investor program as it re-designs the programs and reduces the backlogs.

CIC has also suspended the parent and grandparent sponsorship programs and replaced them with a ‘Super Visa’ that allows foreign parents and grandparents of Canadian citizens and landed immigrants to visit Canada for up to ten years.
 

avaaz

Newbie
Nov 24, 2012
6
0
This is important for foreign trained workers. Where regulations in Canada have been considered to be a major issue in holding us back years after entering Canada:

Citizenship and Immigration Minister Jason Kenney attended the annual conference for Canada’s self-regulatory organizations (SROs) today and asked for their cooperation in helping recent immigrants to Canada become licensed in their field.

The Canadian Regulators Conference, held in Ottawa on November 8th and 9th, is organized by the Canadian Network of National Associations of Regulators (CNNAR), an association made up of some of Canada’s largest SROs, including the Canadian Nurses Association, the Ontario College of Teachers, and the Federation of Medical Regulatory Authorities of Canada.

CNNAR’s annual conferences are intended to foster information sharing on strategies and best practices among regulatory organizations, and are likely seen by Citizenship and Immigration Canada (CIC) as an ideal platform to promote its message of the need to increase regulatory recognition of foreign credentials and licensing of foreign-trained professionals.

Canada’s SROs have been under some criticism recently for occupational regulations that have hampered the labour market integration of Canada’s immigrants.

A report from the Canadian Labour Market and Skills Researcher Network (CLSRN) this month estimates that licensure barriers that prevent immigrants from working in their field of study cost the Canadian economy $2-5.9 billion a year in lost productivity and tax revenue.