Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Universities Want Quebec To Make It Easier To Hire Foreign, High-skilled Talent

The Canadian Press, 08 Feb, 2015 01:39 PM
    MONTREAL — Quebec universities say they're having trouble recruiting foreign professors due to a French language requirement they say hinder their ability to attract high-skilled, international talent.
     
    Several professors and recruiters at the province's two major English-language universities said that Quebec's complex, points-based immigration system puts them at a disadvantage compared to other Canadian and U.S. institutions.
     
    In 2013, the Parti Quebecois government of the day increased the French requirement needed for immigrants applying for permanent residency, which officials at Concordia and McGill said created recruiting headaches.
     
    Quebec's Immigration Minister Kathleen Weil said in an interview the government made the immigration system more flexible in December, but universities say it is still too complicated.
     
    Ghyslaine McClure, associate provost at McGill, said her university has difficulty hiring distinguished professors for research chairs.
     
    Candidates who are in the 40s and 50s don't necessarily want to take several French classes a week in addition to research duties.
     
    "That's where it hurts us," McClure said.
     
    Moreover, she said there is too much paperwork and hoops that applicants need to jump through in order to move to Quebec.
     
    "We would like a special recognition that university professors are highly specialized workers and they should not have that many obstacles," McClure added. "Professors and other eminent specialists are a different ball game."
     
    The Liberal government quietly instituted changes in December, giving more "points" to immigrants with PhDs, allowing some applicants to bypass the French requirement and get residency.
     
    Permanent residency is important for professors and at some institutions like Concordia, they cannot receive full tenure without it.
     
    Stanton Paddock, a journalism professor at Concordia University, hopes to benefit from the new rules.
     
    Paddock said he "went into a total panic"  after moving from the U.S. in 2013 and discovering the amount of French he was going to have to learn. Now, his PhD might allow him to skip the French language requirement altogether.
     
    The new rules allow him to meet with an immigration officer who will determine if Paddock is adaptable enough to live in Quebec.
     
    "The points system is very complex and tedious," Paddock said.
     
    Others, like Emer O'Toole, a professor at Concordia's School of Canadian Irish Studies, isn't phased by the language requirements.
     
    O'Toole, who is from Ireland, has a background in French, having studied the language before coming to Quebec.
     
    "Learning French was part of the reason I was excited to move here," she said. "I enjoy the language (but) I can for imagine people who don't have that background it would be onerous."
     
    She said she appreciates that Quebec wants to protect its language and culture.
     
    "It's very likely (without the protections) French would lose its hold and stop being the primary language in Montreal," she said.
     
    Weil is listening to recommendations aimed at reforming the province's immigration system, where the government is trying to balance the desire to assimilate immigrants into a French workforce while attracting foreign talent critical to diversifying the economy.
     
    Weil said employer groups have said the high level of French required for immigrants are hurting business.
     
    "Employer groups have raised the issue about language requirements, should we relax them or not," she said. "The overall opinion (of the government) is that we need to be very careful and it's important to have people speak French."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Credit Unions End Merger Talks, Cite Operating Environments And Costs

    B.C. Credit Unions End Merger Talks, Cite Operating Environments And Costs
    NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C. — Merger talks have ended unsuccessfully for two credit unions in British Columbia. Westminster Savings Credit Union and Prospera Credit Union announced last September that they had entered into negotiations.

    B.C. Credit Unions End Merger Talks, Cite Operating Environments And Costs

    Gandhi-Bot Beer: Consumer Activist Moves Court

    Gandhi-Bot Beer: Consumer Activist Moves Court
    A consumer activist Thursday filed a complaint against America's New England Brewing Company, which sparked a controversy by using a picture of Mahatma Gandhi on its beer cans and selling them in certain parts of India.

    Gandhi-Bot Beer: Consumer Activist Moves Court

    Muslim Woman Editor Arrested For Reprinting 'Charlie Hebdo' Cartoons

    Muslim Woman Editor Arrested For Reprinting 'Charlie Hebdo' Cartoons
    The woman editor of an Urdu daily was arrested for reprinting a controversial cartoon of Prophet Mohammed which was first published by the French weekly "Charlie Hebdo" but later released on bail, police said Thursday.

    Muslim Woman Editor Arrested For Reprinting 'Charlie Hebdo' Cartoons

    Swap In Personal Learning And Nix Standardized Testing, B.C.'s Educators Hear

    Swap In Personal Learning And Nix Standardized Testing, B.C.'s Educators Hear
    VANCOUVER — An international education expert has giving the thumbs down to standardized testing in schools in favour of a new approach to teaching that centres on a child's individual talents.

    Swap In Personal Learning And Nix Standardized Testing, B.C.'s Educators Hear

    Two Men In Custody After Langford Shooting; Mounties Searching For Gun

    Two Men In Custody After Langford Shooting; Mounties Searching For Gun
    LANGFORD, B.C. — Two men are in custody after a shooting earlier this week in Langford on southern Vancouver Island.

    Two Men In Custody After Langford Shooting; Mounties Searching For Gun

    This year's flu vaccine offered little or no protection in Canada: study

    This year's flu vaccine offered little or no protection in Canada: study
    TORONTO — A new study suggests this year's flu vaccine has offered little or no protection in Canada against becoming sick enough to require medical care.

    This year's flu vaccine offered little or no protection in Canada: study