Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

University Prof Denied Residency Over Son With Down Syndrome Returning To Canada

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Aug, 2016 01:21 PM
    Ottawa has overturned a decision that saw an Ontario university professor denied permanent residency in Canada because his son has Down Syndrome.
     
    Felipe Montoya had been working at York University as a tenured professor of environmental studies when he and his family submitted their application to Citizenship and Immigration Canada.
     
    The family's bid was denied on the grounds that 13-year-old Nicolas Montoya has Down Syndrome and would place an excessive burden on the Canadian health-care system.
     
    Rules stipulate that if one member of a group application is inadmissible for permanent residency, the ruling applies to everyone else as well.
     
    But Montoya says the decision handed down earlier this year was overturned last week through "ministerial intervention" on compassionate grounds.
     
    Montoya and his family returned to their native Costa Rica in June, but say they will now begin the process of preparing to move back. The Ministry of Citizenship and Immigration did not immediately respond to request for comment.
     
    Montoya said he and his family are pleased to be able to return to the country where his children have come of age, but says he plans to keep pushing for reforms to disability laws and policies both before and after he returns to Canadian soil.
     
    "We are still committed to taking advantage of our situation and our case to be able to contribute to the wider disability community in Canada, and not because it's our idea but because the charter says so," Montoya said in a telephone interview from Costa Rica. "It seems like it's our duty to make the laws congruent with the charter."
     
    Montoya's immigration woes began three years ago when he filed an application for permanent residency for himself, his wife and their two children.
     
    The fact that Nicolas had Down Syndrome was disclosed at the outset and confirmed by doctors the family visited for the medical exams required for the application process.
     
    Montoya said Nicolas, along with all the rest of the family, was found to be perfectly healthy.
     
    Montoya hoped the medical clearance would help finalize his application, but a letter from CIC told a different story.
     
    "I have determined that your family member Nicolas Montoya is a person whose health condition might reasonably be expected to cause excessive demand on social services in Canada," reads a letter sent to Montoya. "An excessive demand is a demand for which the anticipated costs exceed the average Canadian per capita health and social services costs, which is currently set at $6,387."
     
    The CIC letter references reports that Nicolas functions at the level of a three-year-old. It goes on to estimate that special education supports for Nicolas would cost between $20,000 and $25,000 a year.
     
     
    Montoya felt the rejection of Nicolas' application was discriminatory in part because it was made on the basis of his disability rather than his physical health.
     
    He also took exception to a common route of appeal in such cases, which sees parents agree to shoulder all additional costs that exceed the government threshold.
     
    "We were not willing to be charged for something we had already been paying for," Montoya said of that approach. "As Canadian tax payers, we believed we were entitled to the services we'd been paying for."
     
    Montoya laid out his arguments in a letter sent in response to his declined application and launched a public awareness campaign for his son's situation.
     
    Eventually officials with the ministry reached out directly and invited him to Ottawa to discuss both his case and proposed policy reforms.
     
    At that point, however, Montoya said there was no indication that the inadmissibility ruling would be overturned. He and his wife had already begun the process of leaving Canada, including giving notice on their rental home, booking movers and making alternate work arrangements with York to head up an environmental project in Costa Rica.
     
    They returned there on June 26, but found themselves facing a different future just over a month later.
     
    Montoya received a letter on Aug. 5 indicating that he and his family were being granted "relief from inadmissibility" under section 25-1-1 of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, which states that a foreign national permanent resident may be granted status if "the minister is of the opinion that it is justified by humanitarian and compassionate considerations."
     
    Montoya said he was of two minds about the exemption, but ultimately accepted it and expressed gratitude. However, he said he does not believe this is the way to resolve similar cases in the future.
     
    "I think the disability community doesn't deserve compassionate and humanitarian considerations, but rather justice and means of inclusion into society," he said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Edmonton Doctor Ismail Taher Sentenced To 30 Days In Jail For Groping Co-Worker

    Edmonton Doctor Ismail Taher Sentenced To 30 Days In Jail For Groping Co-Worker
    Ismail Taher, who is 38, was also given two years probation. The woman said he touched her breasts and buttocks in 2013.

    Edmonton Doctor Ismail Taher Sentenced To 30 Days In Jail For Groping Co-Worker

    Pedestrian Struck in Hit And Run Collision By South Asian Male in Abbotsford

    Pedestrian Struck in Hit And Run Collision By South Asian Male in Abbotsford
    29-year-old male had been walking northbound in a marked crosswalk when he was struck by a left-turning, dark blue, newer sedan driven by an older South Asian male. 

    Pedestrian Struck in Hit And Run Collision By South Asian Male in Abbotsford

    Fentanyl A Main Cause In Surge In B.C. Drug Deaths This Year

    Statistics from the coroner's service show there were 371 deaths in the first six months of this year, about a 74 per cent increase compared with the same period last year.

    Fentanyl A Main Cause In Surge In B.C. Drug Deaths This Year

    Langley Police Need Your Help To Find Missing Woman

    Langley Police Need Your Help To Find Missing Woman
    Nicole SATTLER is 29 years old and was last seen by family on May 5th of this year.

    Langley Police Need Your Help To Find Missing Woman

    Former NDP Constituency Worker Faces Charges Following Alleged Theft From MLA's Office

    Former NDP Constituency Worker Faces Charges Following Alleged Theft From MLA's Office
    Marnie Ruth Offman has been charged with fraud, theft over $5,000 and uttering forged cheques.

    Former NDP Constituency Worker Faces Charges Following Alleged Theft From MLA's Office

    Police Warn Of Online Discounted Canada's Wonderland Ticket Scam

    Police Warn Of Online Discounted Canada's Wonderland Ticket Scam
    MONO, Ont. — Ontario Provincial Police are warning about fraudulent Canada's Wonderland tickets for sale on the Internet.

    Police Warn Of Online Discounted Canada's Wonderland Ticket Scam