Sunday, June 28, 2026
ADVT 
National

Visitors can continue applying for work permits inside Canada

Darpan News Desk IANS, 02 Mar, 2023 11:50 AM
  • Visitors can continue applying for work permits inside Canada

Toronto, March 2 (IANS) Foreign nationals who are in Canada as visitors and who receive a valid job offer will be able to apply for and receive a work permit without having to leave the country, the Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) has announced.

The move, an extension of a Covid-era temporary public policy that was set to expire today, has now been extended by two years, until February 28, 2025.

Visitors applying under this public policy who held a work permit within the last 12 months will also continue to be able to request interim work authorization to begin working for their new employer more quickly.

Prior to this temporary policy change, those applying to work in Canada would typically need to apply for their initial work permit before they came to Canada.

If they were already in Canada with visitor status when they were approved for a work permit, they would need to leave the country to be issued their work permit.

With this policy in place, leaving Canada isn't necessary.

Those looking to benefit from this temporary public policy must have valid status in Canada as a visitor on the day they apply, and have a job offer that is supported by a labour market impact assessment (LMIA) or an LMIA-exempt offer of employment.

An LMIA is an application that an employer makes to Employment and Social Development Canada (ESDC) to evaluate if hiring foreign workers will have a positive, neutral or negative impact on the Canadian economy.

If ESDC deems the impact is negative, the employer will not be eligible to hire foreign nationals, according to CIC News.

Under the policy, applicants must also submit an application for an employer-specific work permit no later than February 28, 2025.

IRCC said that continuing this policy makes visitors an option for employers in Canada, many of whom are facing significant labour shortages during a period of economic expansion.

There was an overall decrease in the number of vacancies to 848,000 from over one million, according to Statistics Canada data from December 2022.

However, key sectors like healthcare, food and social assistance still need more employees to fill in-demand positions.

MORE National ARTICLES

Teen arrested over string of attacks in Vancouver

Teen arrested over string of attacks in Vancouver
The 15-year-old boy from Vancouver was arrested Saturday night after three people were hurt in separate assaults that evening. Police say a 57-year-old man called 911 to say he was chased along the seawall near the Olympic Village by the teen, who repeatedly punched and kicked him.

Teen arrested over string of attacks in Vancouver

Vancouver Police find 51 year old woman dead inside a Mount Pleasant apartment

Vancouver Police find 51 year old woman dead inside a Mount Pleasant apartment
VPD responded to reports of a disturbance inside a building near Ontario Street and First Avenue around 2:30 a.m. on May 1. When officers arrived, they found the victim suffering from fatal stab wounds. She died on scene.    

Vancouver Police find 51 year old woman dead inside a Mount Pleasant apartment

Vancouver City Savings Credit Union experiencing technical problems

Vancouver City Savings Credit Union experiencing technical problems
Vancity Credit Union is asking that customers be patient while the organization resolves the issue of debit cards being declined. The Credit Union also reached out to its customers regarding intermittent system-wide problems in a Twitter post on Sunday.

Vancouver City Savings Credit Union experiencing technical problems

B.C. PharmaCare expands coverage, adds medications

B.C. PharmaCare expands coverage, adds medications
The drugs treat conditions including ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease, severely low blood sugar, migraines, low white blood cell levels, multiple sclerosis and heart failure.

B.C. PharmaCare expands coverage, adds medications

B.C. tables law to fight racism, discrimination

B.C. tables law to fight racism, discrimination
Premier John Horgan says in a statement B.C. is shaped by the diversity of its people, but systemic racism and colonialism have had long-lasting effects of unfairly holding people back for education, employment, housing and other issues.

B.C. tables law to fight racism, discrimination

Vancouver Police say suspicious device responsible for delaying the start of the BMO Vancouver Marathon

Vancouver Police say suspicious device responsible for delaying the start of the BMO Vancouver Marathon
A marathon volunteer spotted the device shortly after 5 a.m. Sunday and promptly called 9-1-1. Vancouver Police cordoned off the area, and bomb technicians from VPD’s Emergency Response Team were deployed to examine and destroy the device.

Vancouver Police say suspicious device responsible for delaying the start of the BMO Vancouver Marathon