Saturday, July 4, 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

Liberal leadership race: A look at the potential candidates

Liberal leadership race: A look at the potential candidates
The federal Liberals are running their first leadership race in more than a decade and their shortest in the party's modern history to replace Justin Trudeau. He announced Jan. 6 that he will step down as soon as a national vote is completed to elect his successor.

Liberal leadership race: A look at the potential candidates

Man dies after falling into a sinkhole while skiing at resort in southeast B.C.

Man dies after falling into a sinkhole while skiing at resort in southeast B.C.
A skier has died after falling into what police say was a snow sinkhole at the Fernie Alpine Resort in British Columbia's East Kootenay region.  RCMP say in a statement that an ambulance was called for the 67-year-old man on Wednesday when he was found buried in snow in a natural terrain trap. 

Man dies after falling into a sinkhole while skiing at resort in southeast B.C.

Border jumper into Canada deported

Border jumper into Canada deported
U-S Customs and Border Protection says the 33-year-old man was handed back to American authorities in Tacoma, Washington. The man was arrested in Surrey over the weekend.

Border jumper into Canada deported

Snowfall warning for 2 BC highways

Snowfall warning for 2 BC highways
Environment Canada is warning of heavy snowfall on two stretches of highways in B-C overnight and possibly stretching into today. The agency says Highway 16 from Tete Jaune Cache to the Alberta boundary will see up to 10 centimetres of snow through noon.

Snowfall warning for 2 BC highways

Elderly driver killed in a T-bone crash

Elderly driver killed in a T-bone crash
Police in Delta are looking for video surveillance footage after an elderly driver was killed in a T-bone collision. Police say the victim was leaving a Wendy's restaurant on December 22nd when the vehicle was struck on its driver's side by another car.

Elderly driver killed in a T-bone crash

Provincial health plans to cover primary care by nurse practitioners, midwives in 2026

Provincial health plans to cover primary care by nurse practitioners, midwives in 2026
Provincial and territorial health plans will cover primary care provided by nurse practitioners, pharmacists and midwives starting next year, federal health minister Mark Holland announced on Friday. 

Provincial health plans to cover primary care by nurse practitioners, midwives in 2026