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Canada opens new residency paths for military recruits, other workers

Yup, this occurred to me. It would probably heavily depend on where they’re coming from. With that said, this is also something that’s entirely a matter of policy within the federal executive; with ministerial level support, much could be decided and implemented.

Less of a concern for doctors and nurses; much more of one for pilots.
I'm not 100% sure about doctors and nurses, but one requirement for being a legal officer is qualification and good standing in a provincial law society. That's because that's where the evaluation standards and control take place. My guess is that its the same for various other professions including doctors and nurses. To the best of my knowledge, the feds have no system for professional qualification evaluation and accreditation for those fields either.

I think the last thing we'd want is yet another "trade" which is not transferable from the military to civvy street. That would mean this initiative needs to partner with at least one province's various accreditation authorities or be a bit of a lame duck.

🍻
 
I'm not 100% sure about doctors and nurses, but one requirement for being a legal officer is qualification and good standing in a provincial law society. That's because that's where the evaluation standards and control take place. My guess is that its the same for various other professions including doctors and nurses. To the best of my knowledge, the feds have no system for professional qualification evaluation and accreditation for those fields either.

I think the last thing we'd want is yet another "trade" which is not transferable from the military to civvy street. That would mean this initiative needs to partner with at least one province's various accreditation authorities or be a bit of a lame duck.

🍻
It may not be a tough sell to find a province willing to move quick to accredit if it potentially gets them an inside track on enticing those medical professionals over to the civilian system after service.
 
These are the types of immigrants that were coming here in the 60s.
It’s about time.
 
I hate to be the debbie downer, but security clearances don’t always easily transfer to Canada.
Sheesh, just switch Departments in government, or come from a Provincial government job to the Federal and see what happens. We need to have it that if you switch departments and you currently have a clearance, it remains valid for whatever timeframe remains. That will reduce security clearance checks and give the folks who do it more time to focus on new applications.
 
Oh man the disinformation train started fast on this one, critics immediately saying Carney is letting the Chinese communist party to take over the CAF
 
Oh man the disinformation train started fast on this one, critics immediately saying Carney is letting the Chinese communist party to take over the CAF
Yeah , but where does Carney stand on alien space lizards ?
Everybody know they're the real threat !
 
A recent report indicated 1 in 5 immigrants leaves Canada within a short time of arriving (IIRC) , with highly skilled, educated, and PhD-holding immigrants leaving at nearly twice the rate.

Are the new changes addressing any reasons why that's happening?
 
A recent report indicated 1 in 5 immigrants leaves Canada within a short time of arriving (IIRC) , with highly skilled, educated, and PhD-holding immigrants leaving at nearly twice the rate.

Are the new changes addressing any reasons why that's happening?

Well, we'd have to fix our whole crappy economy for one thing ;)

I had a conversation with one 'economic immigrant' who told me that Canada was easy to get into but, once you're here, they crush your dreams and your bank account. He went to the US pretty fast as he had highly marketable skills...


Why Skilled Immigrants Are Leaving Canada

Recent reports show that while family and refugee retention rates remain steady (only 8.6% leave over 25 years), economic migrants are departing at much higher rates—nearly 48.1% within the first seven years. Multiple factors fuel this exodus:

Housing Crisis: Nationally, affordability ratios have hit 9:1, and in major cities like Toronto and Vancouver, rents for one-bedroom apartments average over $2,000 per month.

Job Market Strain: Unemployment is rising and foreign credentials remain unrecognized for almost 40% of skilled professionals, delaying promotions and permanent residency applications.

Policy Changes: Federal caps on non-permanent residents, new study permit limits, and longer processing times (up to 196 days in some cases) have created uncertainty for international students and workers.

Global Competition: U.S. tech hubs, European opportunities, and higher salaries abroad lure Canada’s top talent away.

 
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