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Immigration overhaul would let employers choose prospects

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GAP

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Immigration overhaul would let employers choose prospects
joe friesen — Demographics Reporter
From Thursday's Globe and Mail
Published Thursday, Mar. 01, 2012
Article Link


The Conservative government is poised to overhaul the immigration system to give employers an important role in the selection of new Canadians.

Citizenship and Immigration Minister Jason Kenney said he plans to build a faster, more flexible, just-in-time immigration regime. He’s also going to redesign the points system, on which immigrants are judged, to emphasize language ability and youth.
Fresh off a trip to labour-starved Saskatchewan, Mr. Kenney said in an interview Wednesday that he wants to create a new economic stream for trades people, who currently don’t qualify under Canada’s education-focused federal skilled worker program.

He also said employers will soon be able to hand-pick prospective immigrants and send them to the front of the line for assessment.

“Once people have been identified by employers, if they meet our other standards we would fast-track them into the country,” Mr. Kenney said. “Frankly, the employer knows better than a big bureaucracy whose skills are needed and will be relevant to the Canadian labour market the minute they arrive.”

The first of these changes will be introduced over the next few months. Ability in English or French, which research shows is crucial to economic success in Canada, will become more important under the new system. In future, professionals in language intensive fields, such as doctors and lawyers, will have to be fluent in an official language, Mr. Kenney said. That’s a significant shift from Canada’s current system, which rewards language ability but doesn’t set such a high benchmark. At the same time, Mr. Kenney said he wants a flexible language grid, so that applicants in fields that don’t require a high level of fluency aren’t automatically excluded.

Mr. Kenney also said he’ll be considering a pre-assessment system, as they have in Australia, that evaluates the credentials of skilled professionals before they immigrate to see whether they will qualify to work in Canada.

“There is really no point inviting people who are working as licensed professionals in their countries of origin to come to Canada merely to face perpetual frustration as they try to get their licences. It makes sense for Canada and those professionals to do the credential assessment as part of their immigration application,” he said.
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There's going to be big trouble on the transportation front if taxi driver isn't considered a 'skilled professional' job. Toronto will come to a standstill.
 
recceguy said:
There's going to be big trouble on the transportation front if taxi driver isn't considered a 'skilled professional' job. Toronto will come to a standstill.


We have a test in Ottawa: prospective cabbies must display an  encyclopaedic knowledge of the streets of Beirut.

 
E.R. Campbell said:
We have a test in Ottawa: prospective cabbies must display an in depth knowledge of the streets of Beirut human brain/heart/anatomy.
Fixed that for you.
 
Kenney has done just about everything right in this portfolio.  The conservatives can be criticized for some things.  But the immigration overhaul is not one of them.  If anything might have a lasting legacy this certainly will be one of them.
 
Crantor said:
If anything might have a lasting legacy this certainly will be one of them.

Until a party comes into power that wants to pander to immigrant special interest groups...
 
RangerRay said:
Until a party comes into power that wants to pander to immigrant special interest groups...

Now who could that be?  :sarcasm:
 
E.R. Campbell said:
We have a test in Ottawa: prospective cabbies must display an  encyclopaedic knowledge of the streets of Beirut.
If they're like the Lebanese cab drivers I've encountered in New Jersey, at least they have some French.....
 
Canada to test immigrants' professional credentials
Wed Mar 28, 2012
Article Link

By Randall Palmer

OTTAWA (Reuters) - The Canadian government says it is taking action to try to ensure that immigrants with foreign professional credentials are actually qualified to work in their chosen fields in Canada, with the screening to be done before they arrive.

Citizenship and Immigration Minister Jason Kenney announced the proposed new requirement on Wednesday in a speech to regulatory bodies that are responsible for recognizing or denying foreign credentials.

The idea is to avoid situations in which, for instance, foreign doctors cannot find work after immigrating to Canada because Canadian medical bodies will not recognize their qualifications, and end up in jobs such as driving taxis.

"The overall goal here is to better select and better support potential immigrants before they come to Canada, so they can hit the ground running once they arrive by integrating quickly into our labor market," Kenney said.

Kenney said he continually hears heart-rending stories of doctors and other professionals from abroad unable to get licensed to practice in Canada.

The plan is for the government to hire designated third-party organizations to do the assessments, which will feed into the decision on whether to let the applicants immigrate.

Kenney said this would enable Canadian officials to screen out applicants without the necessary education and qualifications more effectively.

He said he hopes to have the system up and running by the end of the year."Not everyone from every country from every university has an equal shot at licensure at a job in a profession in Canada," he said.

"Part of the problem in the past has been our rigid and passive immigration system, which has invited people into the country, even those who frankly will never have a shot at applying their credentials into the licensed profession in Canada."

Kenney said the plan was no guarantee that the proposals would improve the chances that accrediting organizations in Canada - the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario, for example - will end up accrediting the immigrants once they arrive.

The government cannot force the regulatory bodies to accredit more foreigners, and Kenney said it did not want them to lower their Canadian standards. But he did encourage the regulatory bodies to streamline their processes and open up opportunity.
end
 
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