Thursday, November 03, 2022

Canada to start targeting draws for skilled immigrants next year

By Julie Gordon - TODAY

Canada’s Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Sean Fraser attends a press conference with United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi in Ottawa
© Reuters/BLAIR GABLE

OTTAWA (Reuters) - Canada will do targeted draws for skilled immigrants for the first time starting next year, allowing it to cherry pick applicants with the most in-demand skills for the regions of the country that most need workers, the federal immigration minister told Reuters.

A key focus will be on recruiting more doctors and nurses, but only for provinces that make it easier for health workers to validate their foreign credentials and start practicing when they arrive, Minister Sean Fraser said in an interview late on Wednesday.

"We can do a targeted draw beginning in 2023. That will allow us to select workers by the sector that they work in and the part of Canada that they are going to," said Fraser.

"This means we will be able to bring a greater focus to welcome more healthcare workers ... in jurisdictions that will allow them to practice."

In Canada, many economic immigrant candidates are ranked based on language, education and other skills, and those with the highest overall score are invited to apply for permanent residence status.

The change will allow Canada to filter for specific skills and sectors, or for people who will move to specific regions.

Related video: Canada announces new immigration target of 500K per year by 2025
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Canada is struggling with an acute shortage of workers. The most recent job vacancy data showed there were 958,500 open roles in Canada in August and 1.0 million unemployed people.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's government this week boosted its immigration goals and said it aimed to bring in 1.45 million new permanent residents over the next three years. The targeted draws will be under Canada's federal "high skilled" category, accounting for roughly 21.1% of newcomers over that period.

Business groups have said the government needs to do more on immigration to help companies grappling with a historic labor shortage.

Canada's healthcare system is buckling under the strain of the COVID-19 pandemic and a nursing shortage. But the country has also struggled to accredit healthcare workers once they arrive, meaning many foreign-trained doctors and nurses do not end up working in their field.

The provinces are responsible for healthcare in Canada.

"I'm not interested in conducting a targeted draw for healthcare workers that are going to come to Canada and not be permitted to practice their profession," Fraser said.

He added the federal government would work with provinces to ensure a clearer pathway and go ahead with targeted draws for those provinces that ease the transition.

As immigration levels ramp up to record highs, questions are mounting on where the newcomers will live. Canada already faces a housing shortage.

Fraser said the government would focus on welcoming more skilled construction workers to help build new housing supply and on selecting newcomers for areas with the "absorptive capacity" to take them.

(Reporting by Julie Gordon in Ottawa, Additional reporting by Anna Mehler Paperny in Toronto; Editing by Matthew Lewis)


Canada Plans To Give Thousands More People Permanent Resident Status — But Quebec Doesn't

Thomas MacDonald - MTLBLOG

Canada unveiled an ambitious plan to welcome tens of thousands of additional permanent residents in the next few years. But the Quebec government, which selects its own immigrants, is standing its ground on its resistance to higher immigration levels.


MTL Blog

The federal plan calls for 500,000 new permanent residents nationwide by 2025, a big increase from the record 405,000 in 2021.

The goal is to address the country's labour shortage, specifically in the health care, manufacturing, construction and STEM sectors. The federal government also wants to boost immigration to less populous areas through targeted programs for Atlantic Canada, the north and other rural communities.

It has further vowed that a minimum of 4.4% of new permanent residents outside Quebec will be francophone by 2023.

"Last year, we welcomed the most newcomers in a single year in our history," federal Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Sean Fraser said in a statement. "This year's immigration levels plan will help businesses find the workers they need, set Canada on a path that will contribute to our long-term success, and allow us to make good on key commitments to vulnerable people fleeing violence, war and persecution."


Quebec, meanwhile, is sticking to its own immigration levels, which it determines through its unique immigration powers.

"We acknowledge the immigration thresholds presented by the federal government" and "reaffirm that it is up to Quebec to determine its permanent immigration targets," newly minted Quebec Immigration Minister Christine Fréchette tweeted.

"The annual threshold in Quebec is 50,000 in order to respect our capacity to receive, francisize and integrate immigrants."

She also called on the federal government to transfer more immigration authority to the province.

"Our position remains the same: we need more powers in immigration if we want to protect the French language."

This article's cover image was used for illustrative purposes only.

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