Close X
Wednesday, November 6, 2024
ADVT 
National

New international grad work permit program opens

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 Jan, 2021 07:06 PM
  • New international grad work permit program opens

A new work-permit program aimed at encouraging international students to settle in Canada opened for applications Wednesday.

The federal government announced the program this month after international students argued the pandemic had disrupted the job market, making it hard to gain work experience required to apply for permanent residency before their permits expired.

Immigration Minister Marco Mendicino said the new permit offers people more time to find work in Canada after graduating from post-secondary studies.

Former students with post-graduation work permits that have expired or will soon expire can now apply for open work permits, he said.

Under the new program, people have 18 more months to stay in the country to look for work.

The federal department estimates that about 52,000 graduates could benefit.

Post-graduation work permits allow international graduates to gain work experience in “skilled” Canadian jobs and later apply for permanent residence in the country.

Sarom Rho, who leads a migrant student campaign with Migrant Workers Alliance for Change, said the change is a major win for the thousands of people who feared potential deportation once their non-renewable permits expired.

"This is a massive change and it's absolutely a step in the right direction," Rho said in an interview.

"However, there are many who are still left behind."

Some people whose permits were near expiring have already left the country and can't apply under the new rules, Rho said, or they went home to visit their families and have been unable to return due to travel restrictions.

Others whose permits are set to expire after November 2021 are also ineligible to apply, Rho said.

Rho's group, Migrant Students United, also wants Ottawa to consider hours worked in essential jobs unrelated to graduates' programs of study towards their permanent residency applications.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

More jobs at firms with more robots, StatCan says

More jobs at firms with more robots, StatCan says
The findings released today show that over two decades, firms that invested in automation had workforces 15 per cent larger relative to other companies in the same industry.

More jobs at firms with more robots, StatCan says

MacKay opts out of another run for Parliament

MacKay opts out of another run for Parliament
Two months ago MacKay finished second to Erin O'Toole in the Conservative leadership contest and had been spending the fall pondering his political future.

MacKay opts out of another run for Parliament

Three bodies found on Vancouver Island: Coroner

Three bodies found on Vancouver Island: Coroner
The service says in a statement the bodies were found Sunday in an area known as Whiskey Creek, near the community of Coombs.

Three bodies found on Vancouver Island: Coroner

WATCH: BC NDP MLA elect Aman Singh has made history as the first turbaned Sikh in the BC Legislature.

WATCH: BC NDP MLA elect Aman Singh has made history as the first turbaned Sikh in the BC Legislature.
BC NDP MLA elect Aman Singh has made history as the first turbaned sikh MLA elect in the BC Legislature. "Systemic Racism Exists, the only way to fight it is to bring forward representation," said Mr Singh to DARPAN host Ish Sharma. 

WATCH: BC NDP MLA elect Aman Singh has made history as the first turbaned Sikh in the BC Legislature.

Five Things on Canada's foreign end run of Trump

Five Things on Canada's foreign end run of Trump
"Pax Americana is probably behind us," Champagne said in the interview. "Now, we need to see what's our interests, our values and our principles.

Five Things on Canada's foreign end run of Trump

Premiers impatient with PM on health transfers

Premiers impatient with PM on health transfers
The federal government this year will transfer to the provinces nearly $42 billion for health care, under an arrangement that sees the transfer increase by at least three per cent each year.

Premiers impatient with PM on health transfers