Saturday, June 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

PBO: Plenty of immigration staff to meet goals

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Mar, 2023 04:38 PM
  • PBO: Plenty of immigration staff to meet goals

OTTAWA - The federal government has "more than enough" staff to process applications for economic immigrants on time, the parliamentary budget officer says in a new report.

Yves Giroux says his office analyzed the cost of processing applications for economic immigrants through the express entry system for five fiscal years.

For the 2022-23 fiscal year, the report said Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada has 65 per cent more staff than needed to process applications on time.

"That excess number of employees will go down gradually over time, but should still be more than sufficient to meet the service standards that the department has set for itself," Giroux said in an interview on Tuesday.

By 2026-27, the department will have four per cent more employees than it needs to process these types of applications.

The federal government's goal is to process 80 per cent of those applications within six months.

Last year, Canada was grappling with significant immigration backlogs that formed during the pandemic. The federal government announced a hiring blitz to address the backlogs as it faced mounting political pressure over delays.

"We wanted to have a look in the context of these backlogs as to whether or not the issue was one of resourcing from an HR perspective," Giroux said.

The PBO also asked the department to share information about resources that would have been needed to meet processing goals in previous years.

But Giroux said the department refused, saying the information is protected by cabinet confidences.

The government can redact information that was put in front of the cabinet, allowing ministers a level of confidentiality over policy decisions.

Giroux called the department's refusal "frustrating."

"(Just) because you put something in a memorandum to cabinet doesn't necessarily make it a secret, if it is otherwise available in public," he said.

Canada plans to significantly ramp up immigration in the coming years, a decision the federal government says is necessary to address changing demographics and labour shortages.

In November, Immigration Minister Sean Fraser announced a new plan that will see Canada aim to welcome 500,000 immigrants per year by 2025.

Giroux said if backlogs persist, the onus will be on the federal government to explain why.

If the department is as efficient as it should be, Giroux said, it could divert staff from processing applications in the economic stream to the family reunification or refugee streams.

MORE National ARTICLES

Explosive device deactivated in Kelowna, B.C.

Explosive device deactivated in Kelowna, B.C.
A stretch of Highway 97N, also known as Harvey Avenue, was closed in both directions for more than seven hours on Monday as police waited for the disposal unit to arrive from the Lower Mainland. She says the device was not detonated, but was rendered safe by experts who know how to handle such explosives.  

Explosive device deactivated in Kelowna, B.C.

Dental association releases paper on dental care

Dental association releases paper on dental care
The Liberals said the benefit is intended to provide cost-of-living relief to low-income Canadians. The current benefit is available to families whose household income is less than $90,000 a year and ranges from $260 to $650 per child depending on net income.

Dental association releases paper on dental care

MPs summon Google CEO to testify on blocking news

MPs summon Google CEO to testify on blocking news
The summons applies to CEO Sundar Pichai, as well as Kent Walker, president of global affairs, Richard Gingras, vice-president of news, and Sabrina Geremia, vice president and country manager for Google in Canada.    

MPs summon Google CEO to testify on blocking news

B.C. finance minister to table her first budget

B.C. finance minister to table her first budget
Conroy says the prospect of a multibillion-dollar surplus similar to last year's budget is not in the forecast. She says that almost $6-billion surplus was an anomaly that allowed the NDP government to announce numerous spending initiatives on health, affordability, infrastructure and housing.

B.C. finance minister to table her first budget

Snow delays, cancellations, on B.C. south coast

Snow delays, cancellations, on B.C. south coast
The North and West Vancouver school districts called a snow day for all public schools while Simon Fraser University cancelled morning classes at all its campuses and a statement from Vancouver International Airport says visibility and de-icing of aircraft have been affected by the unexpectedly heavy snowfall.

Snow delays, cancellations, on B.C. south coast

Vancouver police apologize after mistaken arrest

Vancouver police apologize after mistaken arrest
The suspect who police thought they were arresting was considered armed and dangerous, and potentially in possession of a firearm, so the department's emergency response team was deployed. Police say during the arrest officers shot the man with two rubber bullets.

Vancouver police apologize after mistaken arrest