Thursday, January 1, 2026
ADVT 
National

Make work-hour pilot permanent: student advocates

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Oct, 2022 01:54 PM
  • Make work-hour pilot permanent: student advocates

OTTAWA - A new pilot project to lift the cap on the number of hours international students can work should be made permanent, say advocates who have spent years asking for the change.

Immigration Minister Sean Fraser announced last Friday the federal government would temporarily remove the 20-hour cap on the number of hours international students can work off-campus to address labour shortages.

The cap will be lifted from Nov. 15 until the end of next year.

The International Sikh Students Association has long been calling for this change, and launched a petition early this year to move that cap from 20 to 30 hours to up the quality of life for students.

Jaspreet Singh, who founded the association, said the government's decision to temporarily lift the cap came as a surprise.

"We were expecting something permanent," he said in an interview. "Not for something in response to a labour shortage, instead of genuine effort to help to improve lives of international students."

The 20-hour cap has never made much sense given most employers in Canada offer eight hour shifts, said Singh, who graduated as an international student two years ago from Sheridan College in the Greater Toronto Area and has since become a permanent resident.

The cap has put stress on students facing ever increasing costs while living in Canada.

"The rent within last five years is almost double," he said. "So everything has gone up."

The government plans to treat the temporary policy as a pilot project, Fraser said at a press conference Friday.

"We’re going to be able to learn some lessons over the course of the next year, and we’re going to be able to determine whether this is the kind of thing we can look at doing over a longer period of time," the minister said.

This is not the first time the cap has been lifted.

In April 2020, the cap was temporarily lifted for international students who served essential roles during the COVID-19 pandemic, including those with jobs in energy, health, finance, food services, transportation and manufacturing.

The exemption for students serving as front-line workers was later ended, and Singh said students are worried the same could happen again if the latest labour shortages are resolved.

NDP immigration critic Jenny Kwan is also pushing for a more permanent change.

"This change is absolutely necessary, and is necessary for the students' survival," Kwan said in an interview.

She welcomed the news about the pilot, but worried about the motivations behind it, she said.

When the government changes immigration measures, Kwan said, "it's never really to support the people who need the changes, but rather, it's always driven by the economy, or by industry."

Fraser called the temporary policy a "win-win" for employers and students looking to get more work experience in Canada.

MORE National ARTICLES

Follow public health guidance on COVID: Horgan

Follow public health guidance on COVID: Horgan
Weekly information released by the BC Centre for Disease Control shows the number of hospitalizations has increased to 485 from 364 last week, while 38 people were in critical care.    

Follow public health guidance on COVID: Horgan

VPD arrests one following protest on Iron Workers Bridge

VPD arrests one following protest on Iron Workers Bridge
One person was arrested following a brief protest on the Iron Workers Memorial Bridge this morning. A 24-year-old woman was taken to jail on charges of mischief and intimidated on a roadway.

VPD arrests one following protest on Iron Workers Bridge

B.C. arson may have been hate: Ukraine congress

B.C. arson may have been hate: Ukraine congress
Victoria police have said five people were in the home early Wednesday when the fire broke out and all made it out alive, although one of the children was injured and a woman needed to be rescued from a window ledge by fire crews.

B.C. arson may have been hate: Ukraine congress

Abbotsford Police investigate 2 robberies at a gas station

Abbotsford Police investigate 2 robberies at a gas station
On April 17th, at 6:04 pm, AbbyPD responded to a second robbery at a gas station located in the 33800 block of Essendene Ave. A lone male suspect described as being 6ft tall, with a medium build, blonde hair, and wearing dark clothing, entered the store with his face covered, displayed a firearm, and obtained money before departing the area on foot.

Abbotsford Police investigate 2 robberies at a gas station

Countrywide action on handguns needed, groups say

Countrywide action on handguns needed, groups say
In a new letter to Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino, several high-profile groups call instead for countrywide measures to phase out the private ownership of handguns.

Countrywide action on handguns needed, groups say

Canada needs robust COVID-19 system: experts

Canada needs robust COVID-19 system: experts
Dr. Caroline Colijn, a mathematician and epidemiologist at Simon Fraser University, said there are currently "too many infections" in Canada to expand access to PCR tests to everyone to find out the true number of infections.

Canada needs robust COVID-19 system: experts