Calgary settlement agency lays off dozens of employees, citing funding uncertainty - Action News
Home WebMail Wednesday, November 13, 2024, 05:06 AM | Calgary | 0.6°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Calgary

Calgary settlement agency lays off dozens of employees, citing funding uncertainty

The Centre for Newcomers (CFN) a non-profit organization that's been a key resource for immigrants and refugees to the city since 1988 let go of 65 employees over the last two weeks because of uncertainty in its government funding.

Move comes during time of record migration to city

A building with a red sign that reads centre for newcomers.
The new Centre for Newcomers has laid off 65 employees, citing a lack of certainty in funding. (Dan McGarvey/CBC)

In the midst of the largest wave of international migration the city has seen in two decades, a Calgary-based settlement agency says it has been forced into a mass layoff of its staff.

The Centre for Newcomers (CFN) a non-profit organization that's been a key resource for immigrants and refugees to the city since 1988 let go of 65 employees over the last two weeks, citing uncertainty in its government funding.

The cuts will leave the centre with roughly 200 workers, Kelly Ernst, the CFN's chief program officer, told the Calgary Eyeopener. Among those let go were settlement workers, case managers and English teachers, he said.

The agency relies heavily on federal dollars to provide services and run its programs. Its 2023 financial statement notes that more than half of its funding comes from federal government grants.

And the demand for those programs is continuously increasing as the number of newcomers rises. The money the CFN is getting, however, isn't enough to keep up, the organization says.

Ernst saidthe organization has seen an increase of more than 400 per cent in demand for services over the past two years.

"My understanding is the budget doesn't accommodate to maintain that level of funding, despite Calgary having pretty significant waves of immigration from newcomers," Ernst said.

"What that ultimately means is clients will be put on wait lists, will be told to go elsewhere, or they just simply won't be getting services in a number of different areas."

a man posing for a picture.
Kelly Ernst with the Centre for Newcomers says the organization has seen an increase of more than 400 per cent in demand for services over the past two years. (Dan McGarvey/CBC)

As needs arise, for example immigration growth or refugee waves fluctuate, contracts between settlement agencies and Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) the department that funds settlement agencies may be amended to accommodate the demand.

Settlement organizations such asthe CFN initially get a five-year contract with the federal government.

In the past, the IRCChas adjusted investments over the course of the year to respond to pressures and when additional funding becomes available, the federal departmentsaid in a statement to CBC News.

"In this instance, funding agreements were amended in March 2023 primarily to address pressures stemming from an influx of arrivals," saidMichelle Carbert, a spokesperson with IRCC.

But Ernstsays the CFN is still working under its original contract.

"It was known ahead of time that, it didn't appear that we were going to be renewed," he said.

"There's still no word from the government as to how they're going to proceed going forward."

In the first quarter of 2023, international migration contributed 35,932 net new residents to Alberta, an increase of approximately 200 per cent from the same time last year.

The IRCC says that the planned investment for settlement services for Alberta will also increase about six per cent this year from approximately $125 million in 2022/23 to nearly $133 million in 2023/24.

With files from Acton Clarkin