Migrant workers need permanent residency status, advocates say - Action News
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Migrant workers need permanent residency status, advocates say

Advocates for migrant workers are calling for Canada to overhaul its migrant worker program and expand permanent residency admissions.

Researchers expect the government to reduce how many permanent residents it will admit each year

Migrant farm workers pick strawberries in a field.
Data from Statistics Canada shows as of this summer, Canada has about 1.34 million temporary workers. (Maggie MacPherson/CBC)

Advocates for migrant workersare calling for Canada to overhaul its migrant worker program and expand permanent residency admissions.

Speaking at a news conference Wednesday, workers and advocates said thousands of newcomers to Canada are currently being left at a power imbalance with their employers.

"Without permanent resident status, migrants are left vulnerable to abuse, exploitation, and in some cases, even death," Karen Cocq, with the Migrant Workers Alliance for Change, said.

The call comes weeks before the federal government is scheduled to announce its planned permanent resident admissions for the next two years. Researchers expect the government to reduce how many people it admits each yeardown from about 485,000 in 2024.

But advocates say bringing in temporary workers without a chance to attain permanent status puts them in a precarious position.

"No conversation about changes to immigration policy or levels should take place without ensuring that migrants have equal rights and the power to exercise those rights,"Byron Cruz, with Vancouver-based Sanctuary Health, said in a news release.

"That is only possible through permanent resident status."

Data from Statistics Canada shows as of this summer, Canada hadabout 1.34 million temporary workers.

So far this year,Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canadasays about 8,500 temporary foreignworkers (TFWs) were granted permanent residency.That does not include TFWswho attained permanent residence status through other programs.

Rmi Larivire, a spokesperson for the department, said the federal government has been taking strong action to protect workers, including a confidential tip line for TFWs and policies to help abused migrant workers switch employers.

"The Government of Canadatakes the safety and dignity of temporary foreign workers very seriously," Larivire said in an email.

A two-tired migration system

But Stacey Plummer, a migrant worker and single mother in New Brunswick, told reporters that without a pathway to permanent residency, her future is uncertain.

Plummer said she came to Canada in 2013 to work in a fish processing plant. She had an employer-specific work permit, which lether work for one specific business, conditional on employment.

Plummersaid her boss there provided cramped housing, placing her in a home with 11 other people.

After five years, Plummerfound a different job, but said she endured poor working conditions there too. She said supervisors would pressureher to work faster under the threat of being sent back to her home country.

"We were afraid of losing our job," she said. "It's hard to be in this situation knowing that you have your rights, but employers are not respecting them."

Now, she has an open work permit for vulnerable workers, which temporarily allows her to work for most employers in Canada.

According to Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada, the program introduced in 2019aims to allow migrant workers to escape abusive workplaces and stay in the country long enough to find a better employer.

Plummersaid her open work permit meant she could find better working conditions without fear of having to leave Canada. But her permit expires in February, and she said she doesn't know what's ahead.

"I do not want to go back to the same abusive system."

'They purposefully don't have these pathways'

Sandra Schinnerl, a migration studies researcher at the University of British Columbia, said temporary foreign worker programs weren't designed to accept all workers as permanent residents.

"Those programs really are set up as temporary," she said. "They're set up to find temporary labour and then have them go back, so they purposefully don't have these pathways."

WATCH | Advocates speak out against temporary foreign worker rollback:

Government is wrong to restrict number of temporary foreign workers, advocate says

2 months ago
Duration 8:46
Syed Hassan of Migrant Workers Alliance for Change says the federal government is inaccurately linking unemployment and high housing costs to migrant workers as it seeks to restrict the temporary foreign worker program.

Advocates' call for change comes as Canada scales back its number of temporary foreign workers. In August, the federal government proposed reducing the portion of temporary residents in Canada from 6.5 per cent of the country's population to fiveper cent.

It said employers would no longer be able to hire more than 10 per cent of their total workforce through the temporary foreign worker program, and low-wage TFWpermits would expire after one year, down from two.

The federal government is scheduled to release the full details of its two-year plan for immigration levels at the start of November.

Schinnerl said she would not be surprised if future announcements include plans to reduce the number of new permanent residency applications approved in Canada.

She said the policy change marks a recent shift in public opinion about immigration.

"Politicians are listening to the public opinion and the discourse and the frustration people are having, and that is what's motivating the policy change."