Wednesday, December 31, 2025
ADVT 
National

Quebec Backtracks On Changes To Immigration Program Aimed At Students

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Nov, 2019 09:14 PM
  • Quebec Backtracks On Changes To Immigration Program Aimed At Students

QUEBEC - The Quebec government is backtracking on proposed changes to a popular immigration program aimed at university students that would've seen many of them sent home.

 

Immigration Minister Simon Jolin-Barrette announced today he will allow students already enrolled in the program to complete it.

 

The about-face comes a day after both Jolin-Barrette and Premier Francois Legault appeared inflexible despite the tearful pleas of students in the program.

 

Jolin-Barrette says those testimonials from distressed students at a news conference inside the legislature led him to change his mind.

 

Hundreds of foreign students admitted to the province under the Quebec experience program could have found themselves forced to leave after the province last week tightened the rules for the program.

 

Jolin-Barrette says the more restrictive rules will be imposed on new students.

 

The popular program allows foreign students with a qualifying diploma or people with work experience in Quebec to receive an expedited selection certificate, making it possible to stay in the province.

 

In 2018, there were 11,000 people admitted under program.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Police should be part of mental health strategy: B.C. death review panel

Police should be part of mental health strategy: B.C. death review panel
The aim of the review is to determine how deaths in similar circumstances could be prevented.

Police should be part of mental health strategy: B.C. death review panel

Search suspended for Calgary man swept away in fast-moving B.C. river

Search suspended for Calgary man swept away in fast-moving B.C. river
Cpl. Madonna Saunderson says jet boats and aircraft had been assisting searchers who were on the ground.

Search suspended for Calgary man swept away in fast-moving B.C. river

Penticton, B.C., approves ban on sitting, lying, on some downtown sidewalks

Penticton, B.C., approves ban on sitting, lying, on some downtown sidewalks
Penticton council voted 5-2 to approve an amendment to the Good Neighbourhood Bylaw, giving police and bylaw officers the power to hand out $100 fines.

Penticton, B.C., approves ban on sitting, lying, on some downtown sidewalks

Department of Fisheries to test for harmful virus at B.C. fish farms

Department of Fisheries to test for harmful virus at B.C. fish farms
Jonathan Wilkinson said the screening for Icelandic and Norwegian strains of piscine orthoreovirus, or PRV, at B.C. aquaculture sites is part of a proposed risk management policy that aims to protect wild salmon and the health of farmed fish.

Department of Fisheries to test for harmful virus at B.C. fish farms

Trudeau says carbon tax can help deal with extreme weather, Alberta fires

Trudeau said Canadians are seeing the impact of climate change with an increase in wildfires in Western Canada, recent tornadoes in Ottawa and flooding across the country this spring.

Trudeau says carbon tax can help deal with extreme weather, Alberta fires

Alberta makes it official: Bill passed and proclaimed to kill carbon tax

The province stopped charging the tax last week

Alberta makes it official: Bill passed and proclaimed to kill carbon tax