Wednesday, December 31, 2025
ADVT 
National

Chris Alexander announces live-in caregiver changes

The Canadian Press , 31 Oct, 2014 02:36 PM
    OTTAWA - A long-awaited overhaul of the program that brings thousands of caregivers to Canada every year will remove the requirement that they live with their employers.
     
    The change is part of an effort to reduce caregiver abuse but also clear a backlog of some 60,000 cases that have seen caregivers stuck waiting as long as a decade for permanent residency and to be reunited with their families.
     
    The live-in requirement feels like modern-day slavery, Immigration Minister Chris Alexander said he was told over the course of designing the new program.
     
    "We are saying to the whole Canadian population, to caregivers above all, the time of abuse and vulnerability is over," Alexander told a news conference in Toronto.
     
    "We want caregivers to participate fully in the economic life of this country without having to fear for their treatment in forced living conditions."
     
    In addition to removing the live-in requirement to qualify for permanent residency, the changes will split the path to that goal into two streams: one for child-care workers and one for those working as health-care aides.
     
    A total of 5,500 applications for both per year will be accepted and they will be processed within six months.
     
    At the same time, the government is nearly doubling the number of caregivers and their families who will be granted permanent residency in 2015 to 30,000 from about 17,000 this year.
     
    But the changes weren't universally embraced. Liza Draman, a one-time live-in caregiver from the Philippines, wasn't impressed, warning that the annual cap of 2,750 applications for the child-care stream is too small and will hurt working families.
     
    "We know that caregivers make work possible for both parents, so what do you expect if one parent cannot go to work — what will that mean for the economy of Canada?" Draman said.
     
    "We need both parents to earn; this will have a chain reaction and have an economic impact."
     
    The live-in caregiver numbers form part of the overall immigration plan for 2015, which sets a target of taking up to 285,000 new permanent residents, an increase of about 19,000 people over last year's goal.
     
    The focus remains squarely on economic immigration, which is about 65 per cent of the total.
     
    Students and temporary foreign workers seeking to settle in Canada permanently may have the best chance at nabbing a spot: spaces in the Canadian Experience Class program are set to jump to up to 23,000 from last year's maximum goal of 15,000.
     
    The program fast-tracks permanent residency for people who are already in Canada as part of other programs, including the controversial temporary foreign workers program, which is undergoing an overhaul.
     
    The government is also set to admit more federal skilled workers, aiming for 51,000 people as it revamps the entry program to bring them to Canada.
     
    Though more economic immigrants are being admitted, spaces for family class immigrants and refugees are being held stable even as the government pledges to do more to bring over those escaping the brutal conflicts in the Middle East.
     
    Alexander has faced persistent criticism over a perceived failure by the government to honour a 2011 commitment to resettle 1,300 Syrian refugees in Canada by the end of 2014.
     
    On Friday, he said more work is being done on those files, with an announcement expected soon on taking additional refugees.
     
    "There is a dynamic of growth in our refugee resettlement performance reflecting the scale of the challenge in the world."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Teachers Vote in Favour of Agreement End Strike, Pull Down Pickets For School To Start

    B.C. Teachers Vote in Favour of Agreement End Strike, Pull Down Pickets For School To Start
    Results of a provincewide vote were announced late Thursday, with 86 per cent of the 31,741 teachers who cast ballots voting in favour of the agreement.

    B.C. Teachers Vote in Favour of Agreement End Strike, Pull Down Pickets For School To Start

    Scotland Referendum disappoints some Scottish-Canadians

    Scotland Referendum disappoints some Scottish-Canadians
    VANCOUVER - Nay may have won the day, but Caledonian-Canadians who supported Scottish independence in Thursday's historic referendum say their dream isn't dead, and at the very least change to the political system is coming.

    Scotland Referendum disappoints some Scottish-Canadians

    Pickets For Pencils: B.C. Teachers Head Back To Classrooms

    Pickets For Pencils: B.C. Teachers Head Back To Classrooms
    VANCOUVER - B.C. Education Minister Peter Fassbender says he hopes the relationship between teachers and the province can be healed over the next five years of labour peace under the hard-fought new contract.

    Pickets For Pencils: B.C. Teachers Head Back To Classrooms

    Serena Vermeersch, Missing Teen, Found Dead in Surrey. Police Search For A Male Suspect

    Serena Vermeersch, Missing Teen, Found Dead in Surrey. Police Search For A Male Suspect
    SURREY, B.C. - RCMP are asking for the public's help in finding a man who may have been involved in the murder of a 17-year-old girl in Surrey, B.C.

    Serena Vermeersch, Missing Teen, Found Dead in Surrey. Police Search For A Male Suspect

    B.C. Teachers Cast Ballots On Bittersweet Contract Deal With Province

    B.C. Teachers Cast Ballots On Bittersweet Contract Deal With Province
    VANCOUVER - The mood was bittersweet Thursday as British Columbia teachers cast ballots on a tentative contract deal that could bring down picket lines and put them back in the classroom.

    B.C. Teachers Cast Ballots On Bittersweet Contract Deal With Province

    RCMP: Death Of 17-year-old Girl Last Seen Boarding Bus In Surrey Deemed Homicide

    RCMP: Death Of 17-year-old Girl Last Seen Boarding Bus In Surrey Deemed Homicide
    The death of a 17-year-old girl in Surrey, B.C., has been deemed a homicide. RCMP were to hold a news conference later Thursday into the case of Serena Vermeersch, whose body was found Tuesday night.

    RCMP: Death Of 17-year-old Girl Last Seen Boarding Bus In Surrey Deemed Homicide