Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

Rona Ambrose Says Liberal Decision To Move Immigration Office Hurts Rural Alberta

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Nov, 2016 01:32 PM
    EDMONTON — Interim Conservative leader Rona Ambrose is accusing the Liberals of ignoring the plight of rural Albertans suffering from the economic downturn.
     
    Ambrose says the decision to move an immigration centre and 280 jobs from the town of Vegreville to Edmonton makes no sense.
     
    She says the government is ignoring growing unemployment in rural Alberta and has no respect for resource industries.
     
    The Liberals say the move planned for 2018 will improve service to Canadians.
     
    Shannon Stubbs, the Conservative MP who represents the riding, says it will devastate the community of 6,000 people.
     
    The Conservatives want the government to reconsider and called on the Liberals to think about the town.
     
     
    "They have been completely blindsided, they can't understand the rational for the decision," Stubbs said Thursday. "In many cases, the employees who work in the processing centre are the only sustaining income for the farm families in the area."
     
    The centre, which opened in 1994, processes temporary and permanent residency applications, work permits, visitor records and study permits, while also backing up other centres across the country.
     
    Infrastructure Minister Amarjeet Sohi, one of two Liberal MPs in Edmonton, defended the decision to move the office to the city.
     
    Sohi said the building's lease is coming due and the government has been having problems hiring people to work at the office about 100 kilometres east of Edmonton.
     
    He said the hiring crunch will get worse as more people at the centre retire.
     
    Sohi said it will be easier to recruit new employees to work in Edmonton.
     
     
    "Immigration has not been able to attract people to work there," he said. "Moving this centre to Edmonton will help improve services and will help us reduce processing times."

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    London's Muslim Mayor Sadiq Khan Named Most Influential Asian In Britain

    London's Muslim Mayor Sadiq Khan Named Most Influential Asian In Britain
    According to GG2 Power List brought out by the leading bi-lingual weekly Garavi Gujarat, 46-year-old Sadiq Khan "smashed one of the biggest glass ceilings in the country" by becoming the first Muslim mayor of a major western capital.

    London's Muslim Mayor Sadiq Khan Named Most Influential Asian In Britain

    Yoga Pants Parade To Protest Man's Comments On Women's Wear

    Yoga Pants Parade To Protest Man's Comments On Women's Wear
      The women plan to hold a parade Sunday in Barrington to show they can wear whatever they want.

    Yoga Pants Parade To Protest Man's Comments On Women's Wear

    You Can Leave Your Hat On: Scholar Says Puritans Were Sexy

    You Can Leave Your Hat On: Scholar Says Puritans Were Sexy
    The famously strait-laced 17th-century sectarians who helped settle America weren't nearly as priggish as you might think, a leading Puritan scholar says.

    You Can Leave Your Hat On: Scholar Says Puritans Were Sexy

    Halloween Duct Tape Project: Masks

    Halloween Duct Tape Project: Masks
    Three Different Looks Using the Same Template

    Halloween Duct Tape Project: Masks

    Halloween Duct Tape Project: Pumpkin Stickers (Faux Jack O'Lantern)

    Halloween Duct Tape Project: Pumpkin Stickers (Faux Jack O'Lantern)
    A Halloween Duct Tape Project Your Kids Will Love!

    Halloween Duct Tape Project: Pumpkin Stickers (Faux Jack O'Lantern)

    Arshad Khan, Pakistan's 'Blue-Eyed' Chaiwala Sparks National Soul Searching

    Arshad Khan, Pakistan's 'Blue-Eyed' Chaiwala Sparks National Soul Searching
    A Pakistani tea merchant with velvet eyes saw his life changed this week when his portrait spread around the Internet, sparking ardent debates on class, objectification, and the place of ethnic Pashtuns in society.

    Arshad Khan, Pakistan's 'Blue-Eyed' Chaiwala Sparks National Soul Searching