Close X
Tuesday, October 8, 2024
ADVT 
National

Ottawa Objects To Giving Quebec Power To Force Immigrants To Settle In Regions

The Canadian Press, 09 Feb, 2019 01:57 AM
  • Ottawa Objects To Giving Quebec Power To Force Immigrants To Settle In Regions

MONTREAL — The federal government is objecting to a Quebec proposal that it be allowed to determine where in the province immigrants settle as a condition of their gaining permanent residency in the country.


Quebec Immigration Minister Simon Jolin-Barrette tabled Bill 9 Thursday, which lays down a legal framework that would allow the province to be more selective with immigrants. One goal is to have immigrants settle in regions experiencing labour shortages.


The federal government, however, has the jurisdiction to grant permanent resident status, and it would have to give Quebec more powers for the legislation to have effect.


Federal Intergovernmental Minister Dominic LeBlanc said Thursday in a statement that "more analysis on Bill 9 is needed, however we do not support the reintroduction of conditional permanent residency."


The federal Liberals abolished conditional permanent residency in 2017, which had forced some immigrants to live with their spouses or partners in Canada for two years in order to keep their permanent resident status.


Quebec Premier Francois Legault said Friday that Quebec should be able impose conditions on immigrants in order for them to be eligible for permanent resident status. "I don't know why we wouldn't be able regain the power that we used to have," he told reporters in Quebec's Beauce region.


Jolin-Barrette says the power to impose conditions on immigrants was granted to Quebec in the 1993 Canada–Quebec Accord on Immigration. He said the previous provincial government of Philippe Couillard renounced that right.


Legault said he is confident Prime Minister Justin Trudeau will come around and grant Quebec more power over immigration.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Pilot Likely Disoriented In Plane Crash That Killed Former Alberta Premier Jim Prentice

Pilot Likely Disoriented In Plane Crash That Killed Former Alberta Premier Jim Prentice
The Cessna Citation jet went down shortly after takeoff from Kelowna, B.C., on its way to the Springbank airport west of Calgary in October 2016.

Pilot Likely Disoriented In Plane Crash That Killed Former Alberta Premier Jim Prentice

Cop Who Arrested Accused In Van Attack Doesn't Want To Be Hailed As Hero

A Toronto police officer who has earned international acclaim for the peaceful arrest of a man accused in a deadly van attack does not want to be hailed as a hero.

Cop Who Arrested Accused In Van Attack Doesn't Want To Be Hailed As Hero

Elderly Prisoner Back In Custody After Walking Away From B.C. Prison

Elderly Prisoner Back In Custody After Walking Away From B.C. Prison
Correctional Service Canada says 83-year-old Ralph Morris was arrested late Wednesday afternoon.

Elderly Prisoner Back In Custody After Walking Away From B.C. Prison

Former Mountie Who Sexually Assaulted Teenage Boys Gets Six Years In Prison

Former Mountie Who Sexually Assaulted Teenage Boys Gets Six Years In Prison
Alan Davidson, 62, was taken into custody by sheriffs at the end of a sentencing hearing in B.C. Supreme Court in Kamloops on Tuesday.

Former Mountie Who Sexually Assaulted Teenage Boys Gets Six Years In Prison

SPCA Search For Person Who Tied A Cat And Left It To Die In A B.C. Dumpster

SPCA Search For Person Who Tied A Cat And Left It To Die In A B.C. Dumpster
British Columbia's SPCA is asking for help in finding the person who tied up a cat and left it to die under a pile of garbage.

SPCA Search For Person Who Tied A Cat And Left It To Die In A B.C. Dumpster

Police Use Blanket To Rescue Man From Sinkhole At Sudbury, Ont., Home

Police Use Blanket To Rescue Man From Sinkhole At Sudbury, Ont., Home
SUDBURY, Ont. — Police say a 55-year-old Sudbury, Ont., man is in hospital after being rescued from a sinkhole.

Police Use Blanket To Rescue Man From Sinkhole At Sudbury, Ont., Home