Close X
Monday, November 18, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Immigrants Should Be Required To Live In Atlantic Region To Boost Population: Frank McKenna

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 12 Jan, 2016 11:30 AM
    SAINT JOHN, N.B. — The three Maritime premiers said Monday their provinces badly need more immigrants, even as a former New Brunswick premier proposed his own solution: require newcomers to live in the region.
     
    "The imperative to have an immigration profile that is similar to the rest of the country in all aspects is mission critical," Prince Edward Island Premier Wade MacLauchlan said Monday.
     
    He was reacting to an op-ed piece written by Frank McKenna, where the former New Brunswick premier says boosting Atlantic Canada's population through immigration is necessary to combat aging and declining populations.
     
    New Brunswick saw deaths outpace births for the first time in 2014, and McKenna said the rest of the country needs to take note because an aging population costs more, and the declining population base will result in less equalization, fewer transfers for health and education, and less money raised from income tax.
     
    McKenna said Atlantic Canada only gets about 2.5 per cent of immigrants to Canada.
     
    "Immigrants go where immigrants are. They are all going to Montreal, Toronto and Vancouver. We have to break that mold somehow and it's going to take a stiff dose of medicine to do that," McKenna, who is now deputy chairman of the Toronto-Dominion Bank, said in an interview. 
     
    He said the federal government should create a special program for Atlantic Canada that would require immigrants to live three to five years in the region before they are granted citizenship.
     
    "During that time it's up to us as citizens, communities and provinces to keep them here," McKenna said.
     
    He said forcing a Canadian citizen to live in a particular province would violate their mobility rights under the Constitution, but he said Constitutional scholars believe it would be a reasonable requirement for people seeking citizenship.
     
     
    New Brunswick Premier Brian Gallant said he has already spoken to the new federal government about the aging demographic and will push the issue again when the federal cabinet meets in the province next week.
     
    "Welcoming new Canadians to Atlantic Canada and to New Brunswick specifically is going to be a big part of ensuring we grow the economy," Gallant said Monday. "Not only that, they add a lot to our culture, they add a lot to our diversity, and those are strengths that I think help any jurisdiction."
     
    Nova Scotia Premier Stephen McNeil said the provinces have a responsibility to work with communities and social groups to create the infrastructure and supports so that immigrants who come to the region will want to stay.
     
    "It won't happen overnight but it will require a thoughtful plan about making sure we have that social fabric in place as well as a commitment by the national government to recognize that they have a role to play in ensuring that giving provinces some control over the number of people who come in to our respective provinces," McNeil said. 
     
    "We're living longer and as we're beginning to age and we begin to consume more health care dollars, we need more, younger people our there driving economic opportunity and job creation."
     
    McKenna said Toronto's population and economy is thriving as a result of immigrants who have arrived with an entrepreneurial spirit and a desire to work. He said the same thing can happen in Atlantic Canada once a base of immigrants is created.
     
    "There's an element of desperation in the way they've lived their lives. They have to work, and have to create jobs for their family members," McKenna said.
     
    "They bring a shock to our society that we badly need."

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Avoid dictatorship at home to save kids from drugs

    Avoid dictatorship at home to save kids from drugs
    Parents who are reasonable and set down clear rules without being overbearing are most successful in preventing their children from taking to drugs and drinks, a study said.

    Avoid dictatorship at home to save kids from drugs

    Attention Foodies! Food addiction is for real!

    Attention Foodies! Food addiction is for real!
    Do you experience food craving just by looking at images of delectable food items regardless of how recently you had eaten? Check if your are overweight.

    Attention Foodies! Food addiction is for real!

    Each minute, 2,500 Britons are making love!

    Each minute, 2,500 Britons are making love!
    Each minute, 2,500 Britons engage in love amounting to a staggering 900 million encounters of the close kind a year -- yet the activity results in barely 770,000 British births each year, a Cambridge mathematician has claimed.

    Each minute, 2,500 Britons are making love!

    Little exercise boosts attention span of poor school kids

    Little exercise boosts attention span of poor school kids
    Just 12 minutes of exercise can improve attention and reading comprehension in low income adolescents, says a new study, suggesting that schools serving low income populations should work brief bouts of exercise into their daily schedules.

    Little exercise boosts attention span of poor school kids

    'Organic', 'natural' packaged food may be unhealthy

    'Organic', 'natural' packaged food may be unhealthy
    Do you get lured by healthy words such as 'antioxidant-rich', 'whole grain', 'organic' and so on into buying more packaged food? Be cautious, as these may actually lead you to put on extra kilos.

    'Organic', 'natural' packaged food may be unhealthy

    Feeling drowsy during the day? Check your bones

    Feeling drowsy during the day? Check your bones
    If you often feel sleepy during the day, chances are that your bones may also be fragile. Researchers have found that orexin proteins - blamed for spontaneous daytime sleepiness - also play a crucial role in bone formation.

    Feeling drowsy during the day? Check your bones