Wednesday, December 24, 2025
ADVT 
National

Feds create new immigration consultant regulator

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Aug, 2021 02:48 PM
  • Feds create new immigration consultant regulator

The federal government is establishing a college for immigration and citizenship consultants to become the official regulator of the profession across the country.

The federal Immigration Department said the college will open in November and will have the needed legal tools to investigate professional misconduct and discipline its licensees to root out immigration fraud and protect people wishing to come to Canada.

Immigration Minister Marco Mendicino said immigrants should be able to access accurate information as they look for details about Canada's immigration system. 

"Those who wish to come to Canada deserve honest, professional and ethical advice — and we have a responsibility to ensure they’re getting it," he said in a news release. 

"Our new College of Immigration and Citizenship Consultants is a major milestone in these efforts."

Immigration and citizenship fraud committed by consultants or people claiming to be consultants has been an issue in Canada for a long time in the absence of regulatory body that monitors these professionals. 

This kind of fraud includes, among other things, collecting additional fees illegally from immigration applicants or asking them to pay an amount of money to ensure the success of their applications. 

The new college will replace the Immigration Consultants of Canada Regulatory Council that began regulating immigration consultants in 2011, along with citizenship consultants and international student advisers in 2015, under the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act and the Citizenship Act. 

The federal government passed a new law in Parliament last year that was designed specifically to regulate the work of citizenship and immigration consultants.

The law gives the college the power to enter the premises of a consultant for the purpose of gathering information to support an investigation, and compel witnesses to appear and testify before its discipline committee. 

The college will also be able to request court injunctions to address unlicensed actors providing immigration or citizenship advice without authorization.

The board of directors of the college will be made of five directors appointed by the immigration minister and four consultants.

The Immigration Department said the code of professional conduct of the new college is still under development and it will play a major role in maintaining strong ethical and professional standards for the consultants. 

MORE National ARTICLES

Self-employed CERB recipients may get cash back

Self-employed CERB recipients may get cash back
For anyone whose net self-employment income was under $5,000, those conditions include having filed their 2019 and 2020 tax returns and having $5,000 or more in gross self-employment income in the 12 months before their application for benefits.

Self-employed CERB recipients may get cash back

Panel recommends end of COVID quarantine hotels

Panel recommends end of COVID quarantine hotels
An expert panel recommends the government no longer require travellers arriving by air into Canada quarantine for up to three days at a hotel.

Panel recommends end of COVID quarantine hotels

B.C. moves up second COVID vaccine shot to 8 weeks

B.C. moves up second COVID vaccine shot to 8 weeks
Provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry says there is now sufficient Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine to move up the interval for the booster shot to about eight weeks.

B.C. moves up second COVID vaccine shot to 8 weeks

378 COVID cases for Thursday

378 COVID cases for Thursday
BC has hit significant vaccine milestone. So far 3,032,811 doses of a COVID vaccine have been administered in BC. 156,730 are second doses. 65.8% of adults have received at least one dose.

378 COVID cases for Thursday

Facebook changes policy on COVID-19 information

Facebook changes policy on COVID-19 information
Facebook doesn’t usually ban misinformation outright on its platform, instead adding fact-checks by outside parties, which includes The Associated Press, to debunked claims. The two exceptions have been around elections and COVID-19.

Facebook changes policy on COVID-19 information

Trudeau supports search for COVID-19 origin

Trudeau supports search for COVID-19 origin
The military help was requested last week as the province posted the highest daily case numbers, per capita, in the country. There were 295 more cases and eight additional deaths reported in Manitoba Thursday.

Trudeau supports search for COVID-19 origin