Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Immigrants need more info access: watchdog

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 May, 2021 09:57 AM
  • Immigrants need more info access: watchdog

The federal information watchdog says the Immigration Department needs to provide easier access to information for immigration applicants seeking more than a bare-bones outline of their files.

In a new report today, information commissioner Caroline Maynard is calling for readier transparency as aspiring Canadians frequently have to resort to requests under the Access to Information Act.

Maynard says the recurring complaint to her office revolves around a lack of available information on details such as application status or the reasoning behind decisions, which can be hard to obtain through the department's online account portal.

The report says the Immigration Department received about 117,000 access-to-information requests in 2019-20 — nearly three times more than all other federal institutions combined — and became the target of the highest number of complaints to the information commissioner's office.

Maynard is calling on Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada to provide more timely responses to the requests as well as broader measures to reduce the need for those demands in the first place.

The department says it plans to modernize its digital platform in the next two to three years and launch a review that could result in more details about why an application was denied, all with a view to greater information for would-be residents.

MORE National ARTICLES

Foreign-buyers tax to bring in $509 million: PBO

Foreign-buyers tax to bring in $509 million: PBO
The Liberals are proposing a one per cent tax on vacant homes owned by foreign non-residents to cool an overheated housing market across the country.

Foreign-buyers tax to bring in $509 million: PBO

More COVID-19 tickets issued during second wave

More COVID-19 tickets issued during second wave
The provinces have now reached over $24 million in fines issued since the outset of the pandemic, which is really an astounding amount of money.  

More COVID-19 tickets issued during second wave

B.C. money laundering inquiry to wrap testimony

B.C. money laundering inquiry to wrap testimony
Cullen is expected to complete his report by Dec. 15. It is expected to include recommendations that address the conditions that enabled money laundering to flourish in B.C.

B.C. money laundering inquiry to wrap testimony

COVID-19 may be factor in public gang violence

COVID-19 may be factor in public gang violence
Martin Bouchard, a professor in Simon Fraser University's school of criminology, says the pandemic has changed people's routines and they aren't getting out of their homes often, which could play a role in the brazen nature of shootings.

COVID-19 may be factor in public gang violence

Expect more reactions from mixing vaccines: study

Expect more reactions from mixing vaccines: study
Preliminary results of an ongoing study in the United Kingdom suggest alternating the Oxford-AstraZeneca and Pfizer-BioNTech vaccines causes more frequent mild to moderate symptoms, but there are no other safety concerns from mixing those vaccines.

Expect more reactions from mixing vaccines: study

Unpaid COVID fines linked to B.C. driver's licence

Unpaid COVID fines linked to B.C. driver's licence
People who don't pay their COVID-19 fines may be unable to obtain or renew a British Columbia driver's or vehicle licence under proposed legislation introduced Wednesday.

Unpaid COVID fines linked to B.C. driver's licence