Close X
Friday, November 22, 2024
ADVT 
National

COVID-19 highlights need for better treatment of migrant labour, advocates say

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Jun, 2020 09:45 PM
  • COVID-19 highlights need for better treatment of migrant labour, advocates say

Migrant-rights advocates say the COVID-19 pandemic has shown that labourers in Canada can no longer be treated like "throwaway people" as they have been in the past.

Asylum-seekers working in long-term care homes in Quebec, temporary foreign workers on farms and new immigrants toiling in meat-packing plants are all working in jobs now considered essential.

But Shelley Gilbert, who works on human-trafficking cases in Windsor, Ont., says for too long people in those industries have been considered throwaways.

She and others said today that the existing immigration and workers'-rights regimes don't provide enough protections, including pathways to permanent residency.

Gilbert says the issue is particularly acute among victims of human trafficking, who are often left undocumented or on temporary permits because their plight is not taken seriously.

The federal Liberals are considering a program that would specifically help asylum-seekers who took work in the health care system during the COVID-19 pandemic, but advocates say it ought to be extended to everyone.

MORE National ARTICLES

Feds commit $8.9M in foreign aid for reproductive health services amid COVID-19

Feds commit $8.9M in foreign aid for reproductive health services amid COVID-19
Canada is dedicating $8.9 million in new international aid to ensure women and girls around the world have safe access to abortion and reproductive health services during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Feds commit $8.9M in foreign aid for reproductive health services amid COVID-19

Details on federal food buy-back program coming soon, Bibeau says

Details on federal food buy-back program coming soon, Bibeau says
Details of a program that will see the federal government buy surplus food from farmers and redistribute it to food banks and other community groups are coming soon, Liberal Agriculture Minister Marie-Claude Bibeau promised Tuesday.

Details on federal food buy-back program coming soon, Bibeau says

B.C., Ontario shipyards team up to seek multibillion-dollar icebreaker contract

B.C., Ontario shipyards team up to seek multibillion-dollar icebreaker contract
Canada's cutthroat shipbuilding industry saw a surprise alliance Tuesday as two competing yards announced plans to team up to win a multibillion-dollar contract to build a new polar icebreaker for the Canadian Coast Guard.

B.C., Ontario shipyards team up to seek multibillion-dollar icebreaker contract

Cautious Canadians increasingly wearing masks, fear second wave of COVID: Poll

Cautious Canadians increasingly wearing masks, fear second wave of COVID: Poll
Canadians are increasingly wearing protective face masks as they emerge from months of isolating at home to curb the spread of COVID-19, a new poll suggests.

Cautious Canadians increasingly wearing masks, fear second wave of COVID: Poll

Liberals hunting for support for bill reforming COVID-19 benefits

Liberals hunting for support for bill reforming COVID-19 benefits
The Trudeau Liberals' push for changes to a key benefit for workers affected by the COVID-19 pandemic hit political roadblocks as the New Democrats withdrew support for a draft bill that would fine or imprison people who made fraudulent claims.

Liberals hunting for support for bill reforming COVID-19 benefits

Increased demand as more surgeries resume concerns Canadian Blood Services

Increased demand as more surgeries resume concerns Canadian Blood Services
Canadian Blood Services says the resumption of elective surgeries following months of COVID-19 lockdown is putting a worrisome drain on the national blood supply.

Increased demand as more surgeries resume concerns Canadian Blood Services