Monday, May 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

Government hoping for modest increase in immigration levels next year

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 31 Oct, 2014 11:10 AM

    OTTAWA — Canada is hoping to welcome more immigrants next year.

    The government will release its immigration plan for 2015 today, and it's expected to show an increase in overall numbers.

    The main focus will be on accepting more economic immigrants, which will make up 65 per cent of the total, up two per cent from last year.

    Among the increases will be more spots available in a program designed to get students and temporary foreign workers to permanently settle in Canada.

    New data is also expected Friday on the state of the temporary foreign worker program in the wake of program overhauls.

    Last year, the government sought to welcome between 240,000 and 260,000 people to Canada.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Land from park in Nisga'a territory could be removed for proposed B.C. pipeline

    Land from park in Nisga'a territory could be removed for proposed B.C. pipeline
    VICTORIA — The B.C. government has introduced legislation that could allow for the removal of 63.5 hectares of land from a protected park if a proposed pipeline project in the Nisga'a Nation's territory goes ahead.

    Land from park in Nisga'a territory could be removed for proposed B.C. pipeline

    PM Stephen Harper Announces 'Family Tax Cut', Child Care Benefit Boost

    PM Stephen Harper Announces 'Family Tax Cut', Child Care Benefit Boost
    OTTAWA - Prime Minister Stephen Harper is pressing ahead with income splitting for families with kids under 18 — a multibillion-dollar Conservative election promise from 2011 that critics have said would benefit too few Canadians.

    PM Stephen Harper Announces 'Family Tax Cut', Child Care Benefit Boost

    B.C. Family Haunted By Caitlin Murray's Disappearance More Than A Year Ago

    B.C. Family Haunted By Caitlin Murray's Disappearance More Than A Year Ago
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — The mystery of what happened to a 21-year-old B.C. woman continues to haunt her family more than a year after she disappeared.

    B.C. Family Haunted By Caitlin Murray's Disappearance More Than A Year Ago

    Stickboy Opera Opens In Vancouver To Take On Bullying Based On Poet's Life

    Stickboy Opera Opens In Vancouver To Take On Bullying Based On Poet's Life
    The new work about school bullying opened to positive reviews in the city and will run until Nov. 7, with hopes of having the production tour high schools throughout British Columbia.

    Stickboy Opera Opens In Vancouver To Take On Bullying Based On Poet's Life

    Wynne on possible Doug Ford PC leadership bid: 'we are very different'

    Wynne on possible Doug Ford PC leadership bid: 'we are very different'
    BEIJING — While Premier Kathleen Wynne says she doesn't want to get involved in the Progressive Conservative leadership tilt in Ontario, she acknowledges that a Doug Ford victory would present "an exercise in contrast."

    Wynne on possible Doug Ford PC leadership bid: 'we are very different'

    BDSM not abuse but way to spice up sex life in safe, consensual way: adherents

    BDSM not abuse but way to spice up sex life in safe, consensual way: adherents
    TORONTO - Fired CBC radio host Jian Ghomeshi's admission that he engages in rough sex has Canadians hearing a term that many may be unfamiliar with — BDSM, or bondage, dominance, sadism and masochism. So just what does BDSM involve and what draws adherents to this kind of sex?

    BDSM not abuse but way to spice up sex life in safe, consensual way: adherents