Thursday, June 25, 2026
ADVT 
National

Paying failed refugee claimants to leave Canada didn't work as planned: review

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Jan, 2015 12:29 PM

    OTTAWA — A government pilot project that essentially paid failed refugee claimants to leave Canada won't be renewed after a scathing internal review.

    The program was supposed to save time and money when it came to getting failed refugee claimants out of the country — but appears to have done neither.

    The controversial pilot project gave failed claimants between $500 and $2,000 in exchange for their voluntary departure from Canada, and also covered the cost of their plane ticket.

    But an internal evaluation of the program found that its rationale — to encourage people to leave, rather than appeal their decisions — was flawed.

    And the idea that payments would make removing failed claimants cheaper also didn't bear scrutiny — it actually made it more costly and time-consuming.

    The pilot project is scheduled to end in March and a spokesperson for Canada Border Services Agency says the government is committed to finding new ways to remove people from Canada in a cost-effective manner.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Track Day for Charity

    Track Day for Charity
    There are numerous ways one can support a good cause. You can raise funds by selling chocolates, or collect pledges and run for charity. And, if you’re a car enthusiast, you can even donate money to do laps around a racetrack with your own vehicle.

    Track Day for Charity

    How Facebook helped find an abducted Quebec newborn

    How Facebook helped find an abducted Quebec newborn
    With the help of social media and four quick thinking friends, a new born baby girl was safely returned to her parents after being abducted Monday night in Trois-Rivières, Quebec.

    How Facebook helped find an abducted Quebec newborn

    BC Teachers' Rotating Strikes Begin, Schools Closed

    BC Teachers' Rotating Strikes Begin, Schools Closed
    Starting today, over 41,000 BC teachers are staging rotating strikes in every public school across the province. 

    BC Teachers' Rotating Strikes Begin, Schools Closed

    Turks and Caicos to be Canada's 11th Province? Visit by Caribbean Island Premier Re-kindles Dreams

    Turks and Caicos to be Canada's 11th Province? Visit by Caribbean Island Premier Re-kindles Dreams
    A visit by the Premier of the Turks and Caicos Islands to Parliament Hill on Monday has re-ignited Conservative MP Peter Goldring’s dream to annex the islands and make it Canada’s 11th province.

    Turks and Caicos to be Canada's 11th Province? Visit by Caribbean Island Premier Re-kindles Dreams

    RCMP to investigate Pamela Anderson's Rape claims

    RCMP to investigate Pamela Anderson's Rape claims
    Canadian police have set up a criminal inquiry after ex-Baywatch star Pamela Anderson claimed that she was gang-raped as a child 

    RCMP to investigate Pamela Anderson's Rape claims

    What your desk says about your mind may be extremely worrying

    What your desk says about your mind may be extremely worrying
    My colleagues say I have a disgustingly messy desk. I prefer to call it "the ideas vortex". But tidiness was on my mind this week after hearing about firefighters who recently raced to a scene of utter devastation in a residential street in Canada. 

    What your desk says about your mind may be extremely worrying