Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

New Immigration Pilot Will Offer Residency To Some Migrant Farm-workers

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 12 Jul, 2019 08:51 PM

    OTTAWA - A new three-year immigration experiment that will give migrant workers a path to permanent residency in Canada is getting a thumbs-up from industry but a thumbs-down from migrant rights groups.

     

    Over the last several years, industries such as meat cutting and processing and mushroom farming have relied on seasonal temporary foreign workers due to labour shortages, even though the work is not seasonal.

     

    A new pilot program announced on Friday aims to attract and retain migrant workers by giving them an opportunity to become permanent residents.

     

    Currently, migrant farm workers who come to Canada through the program for seasonal agricultural workers are only given limited-term work permits and do not have a pathway to permanent residency.

     

    Temporary foreign farm workers who are eligible for this new pilot will be able to apply for permanent residency after 12 months and, if they're approved, will also be allowed to bring their families to Canada.

     

    Industry groups are applauding the new program, which they say is badly needed to address a lack of people available or willing to work on farms and in food-processing plants.

     

    A study by the Canadian Agricultural Human Resource Council released last month found farmers across Canada lost $2.9 billion in sales due to unfilled job vacancies. The study also found the situation has improved, thanks to access to migrant workers and new technologies, but Canadian farms and agri-food plants are still dealing with 16,500 vacancies.

     

    Ryan Koeslag, executive vice president of the Canadian Mushroom Growers Association, said Friday he is pleased to see the federal government willing to adapt its immigration policies to benefit certain agriculture producers.

     

    "For the last decade or more, mushroom growers and other farmers, have fought for immigration access for our sector's farm workers employed in year-round jobs," said Ryan Koeslag, executive vice president of the Canadian Mushroom Growers Association.

     

    But Chris Ramsaroop, spokesperson for the group Justice for Migrant Workers, said the access to permanent residency will only apply to those who take part in this narrow pilot program and will continue to be unavailable to the thousands of migrant farm-workers who arrive through the seasonal agriculture workers program.

     

    "We're dividing agricultural workers based on which industries are more deserving than others," he said, noting migrant workers who have already been working in Canada in meat production or mushroom plants will have easier access to this program than fruit- or vegetable-farm workers.

     

    Ramsaroop says migrant groups continue to call on the government to offer all temporary foreign workers permanent status upon arrival in Canada.

     

    A maximum of 2,750 principal applicants, plus family members, will be accepted for processing each year during the three-year pilot. Applications are to be accepted beginning in 2020.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Montreal's New, $4.4-billion Champlain Bridge Opens To First Traffic

    Montreal's expensive new Samuel De Champlain Bridge opened to traffic for the first time this morning, about six months behind schedule.

    Montreal's New, $4.4-billion Champlain Bridge Opens To First Traffic

    Mysterious $100 Bill, Life-affirming Note Delights Nova Scotia Town

    An anonymous benefactor who secretly placed a $100 bill and an unabashed message of positivity in a Nova Scotia park has delighted and intrigued the town's residents.

    Mysterious $100 Bill, Life-affirming Note Delights Nova Scotia Town

    Cool Weather Calms Wildfire North Of Vancouver, But Traffic Still Disrupted

    Cool Weather Calms Wildfire North Of Vancouver, But Traffic Still Disrupted
    The fire along Highway 99, the Sea-to-Sky corridor, broke out early Sunday morning on a steep, rocky slope between Horseshoe Bay and Lions Bay.

    Cool Weather Calms Wildfire North Of Vancouver, But Traffic Still Disrupted

    Witnesses Sought In Brampton Homicide Of 20-Year-Old Gurjot Dhaliwal

    Investigators believe there are witnesses that have not had the opportunity to speak with officers about this incident.

    Witnesses Sought In Brampton Homicide Of 20-Year-Old Gurjot Dhaliwal

    BHAVKIRAN DHESI HOMICIDE: GURVINDER DEO (25) And TALWINDER KHUN KHUN (22) Arrested By IHIT, Additional Charges Laid

    BHAVKIRAN DHESI HOMICIDE: GURVINDER DEO (25) And TALWINDER KHUN KHUN (22) Arrested By IHIT, Additional Charges Laid
    Two men have been arrested and charged in connection with the 2017 homicide of Bhavkiran Dhesi in Surrey.

    BHAVKIRAN DHESI HOMICIDE: GURVINDER DEO (25) And TALWINDER KHUN KHUN (22) Arrested By IHIT, Additional Charges Laid

    B.C.'s Police Watchdog Investigates Man's Fall From North Vancouver Apartment

    B.C.'s Police Watchdog Investigates Man's Fall From North Vancouver Apartment
    VANCOUVER — B.C.'s police watchdog has started an investigation after a man who police were searching for in North Vancouver fell from a third-floor window.

    B.C.'s Police Watchdog Investigates Man's Fall From North Vancouver Apartment