Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
National

Loan program blamed for leaving refugees in financial trouble to be reworked

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Oct, 2017 11:29 AM
  • Loan program blamed for leaving refugees in financial trouble to be reworked
The Liberals are finally overhauling a program that provides loans to refugees to cover the cost of their resettlement to Canada, but they're stopping short of demands the system be scrapped entirely.
 
Instead, the government is proposing to eliminate interest charges on all new loans and give new borrowers more time to pay them back, according to a notice of the pending changes posted online by Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada.
 
"Eliminating interest charges and extending the repayment period as well as the period before the loan becomes repayable will give resettled refugees more time to focus on their integration, without needing to give immediate attention to loan repayments," the notice says.
 
Those who currently have a loan would not accumulate any further interest but their repayment schedule would remain the same; recipients must begin paying back the loan 30 days after landing in Canada and have between one and six years to repay, depending on the amount.
 
The immigration loan program was set up in the aftermath of the Second World War to help immigrants from Europe who couldn't cover the costs of their travel to Canada. But today, 98 per cent of the program's users are refugees hand-picked by the government or private sponsors to settle in Canada.
 
A 2015 evaluation of the loan program found the existing repayment terms were having a negative effect on the ability of refugees to settle in Canada and suggested the government find a better way to help cover their transportation and other costs.
 
The government issues about $13 million in loans annually, and about 93 per cent are eventually repaid. Most of the money goes to fund the cost of travel to Canada.
 
Resettled refugees aren't forced to take out a loan, but between 2008 and 2012, an average of 94 per cent of refugees resettled by the government had one, according to government statistics.
 
"There is somewhat of a running joke in the sponsorship community, which is: 'How do we welcome refugees to Canada? With debt,'" Malaz Sebai, a director on the board of the major refugee sponsorship group Lifeline Syria, told a Senate committee in 2016.  
 
The evaluation of the loan program was published as the federal government was in the process of settling thousands of Syrian refugees. Loans were waived for new arrivals from Syria, but not for refugees from elsewhere, prompting cries of a double standard.
 
In the notice posted online late Friday, the department acknowledged that many have asked for the loan program to simply be cancelled.
 
"The desire to reduce the financial impact of the loans undertaken by resettled refugees was weighed against the financial priorities of the government of Canada and potential costs of various options."
 
The government estimates it would lose about $7.3 million in foregone interest over the 10 years following the start of the new program.
 
The amount of money needed to be set aside to cover the cost of the loans would also increase to $126.6 million a year, up from about $110 million.

MORE National ARTICLES

Justin Trudeau Marks Eid Al-Adha: Prime Minister Urges Canadians To Fight Islamophobia- SEE PICS

Justin Trudeau Marks Eid Al-Adha: Prime Minister Urges Canadians To Fight Islamophobia- SEE PICS
Eid al-Adha is a Muslim holiday also know as the feast of sacrifice and marks Abraham's willingness to sacrifice his son for God.

Justin Trudeau Marks Eid Al-Adha: Prime Minister Urges Canadians To Fight Islamophobia- SEE PICS

Darshan Kang Resigns From Liberal Caucus After Sexual Harassment Allegations From A Second Woman

In a written statement, Kang said he's leaving the governing party's caucus because "I wish to focus my efforts at this time on clearing my name."

Darshan Kang Resigns From Liberal Caucus After Sexual Harassment Allegations From A Second Woman

Three Dead In Separate Metro Vancouver Shootings Just 12 Hours Apart

Three Dead In Separate Metro Vancouver Shootings Just 12 Hours Apart
Police say a man and woman have died in what appears to be a targeted shooting in Langley, B.C. About 12 hours earlier, a man was shot to death in an attack in Abbotsford that police also described as targeted

Three Dead In Separate Metro Vancouver Shootings Just 12 Hours Apart

IHIT Investigating Surrey Man Pardeep Singh's Murder

IHIT Investigating Surrey Man Pardeep Singh's Murder
Surrey: On August 29, 2017 at 8:45 p.m. the Surrey RCMP responded to a report of a shooting in the 6300 block of 166 Street. 

IHIT Investigating Surrey Man Pardeep Singh's Murder

B.C. Schools Scrambling To Hire Teachers To Meet New Class-size Standards

B.C. Schools Scrambling To Hire Teachers To Meet New Class-size Standards
VANCOUVER — School districts in British Columbia are scrambling to hire thousands of teachers ahead of the new school year to satisfy a court decision that reinstates standards on class size.

B.C. Schools Scrambling To Hire Teachers To Meet New Class-size Standards

Toronto Neurosurgeon Mohammed Shamji Charged In The Death Of His Wife Denied Bail

Toronto Neurosurgeon Mohammed Shamji Charged In The Death Of His Wife Denied Bail
TORONTO — A Toronto neurosurgeon charged with first-degree murder in the death of his wife has been denied bail.

Toronto Neurosurgeon Mohammed Shamji Charged In The Death Of His Wife Denied Bail