Wednesday, July 1, 2026
ADVT 
National

Ottawa must cancel or significantly reform temporary foreign worker program, says Eby

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 Sep, 2025 08:53 AM
  • Ottawa must cancel or significantly reform temporary foreign worker program, says Eby

British Columbia Premier David Eby says the temporary foreign worker program should "be cancelled or significantly reformed" because the province can't have an immigration system that takes young people's jobs, while filling up homeless shelters and food banks. 

Eby says one reason B.C. is facing "significant fiscal headwinds" is because of "very high unemployment rates" among young people, linked to both the temporary foreign worker program and the international student program.

He says B.C. is willing to "convene provinces that are interested in this issue" to have a "serious, grown-up" conversation about immigration in Canada and its impact on critical infrastructure, such as housing and schools. 

Federal Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre has also said Canada should cancel the program with exceptions for difficult-to-fill agricultural jobs, and Eby says it's a "very timely issue" for the federal government to consider. 

Prime Minister Mark Carney said Wednesday that his government would review the program but also added that it "has a role to play."

Eby, who was in Surrey, B.C. for a separate announcement, says Carney's government has taken "some good steps to rein in the excesses" of the program but Ottawa needs to do more. 

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck

MORE National ARTICLES

Internal military report blames botched shooter drill on poor organization

Internal military report blames botched shooter drill on poor organization
During the drill, which took place on Nov. 12 at a service depot at CFB Longue-Pointe in Montreal, military police also confused a racialized employee with a drill participant playing an active shooter and wrestled him to the ground.

Internal military report blames botched shooter drill on poor organization

70% of Canadians support retaliatory tariffs on United States: poll

70% of Canadians support retaliatory tariffs on United States: poll
Seventy per cent of Canadians are in favour of dollar-for-dollar retaliatory tariffs on the United States, a new poll suggests. Nearly half of respondents to the Leger poll — 45 per cent — said they were strongly in favour of such tariffs, while 25 per cent said they were somewhat in favour.

70% of Canadians support retaliatory tariffs on United States: poll

Police release names of victims in Abbotsford double homicide

Police release names of victims in Abbotsford double homicide
Police have released the names of the two victims in an Abbotsford double homicide in January. A statement from the province's Integrated Homicide Investigation Team says police responded to a vehicle fire in Sumas Mountain Regional Park on Jan. 3 and found a 2014 Mitsubishi Outlander engulfed in flames.

Police release names of victims in Abbotsford double homicide

Flood watch up due to possible ice jam on B.C. Interior waterways

Flood watch up due to possible ice jam on B.C. Interior waterways
British Columbia's River Forecast Centre has posted a flood watch on three Interior waterways because of the chance of a midseason ice jam. The centre says temperatures in the first two weeks of February have been between 10 C and 17 C below normal in the Merritt area.

Flood watch up due to possible ice jam on B.C. Interior waterways

Dairy workers’ cats died from bird flu, but it’s not clear how they got infected

Dairy workers’ cats died from bird flu, but it’s not clear how they got infected
Two cats that belonged to Michigan dairy workers died after being infected with bird flu. But it's still not clear how the animals got sick or whether they spread the virus to people in the household, a new study shows. Veterinary experts said the report, published Thursday by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, lacks detail that could confirm whether people can spread the virus to domestic cats — or vice versa.

Dairy workers’ cats died from bird flu, but it’s not clear how they got infected

B.C. task force aims to grow agriculture, food processing industries

B.C. task force aims to grow agriculture, food processing industries
Agriculture Minister Lana Popham says the task force will provide recommendations to government in the next 10 months on topics such as access to water, land and labour, as well as competitiveness and investment.

B.C. task force aims to grow agriculture, food processing industries