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Proposed fixes to temporary foreign workers program fail to address power imbalance, critic says

A Senate report lays out six recommendations for an overhaul of Canada's temporary foreign worker program, one the report states is 'not working for migrant workers and could be better for employers.'

Among the recommendations is the creation of a new office to deal with abuse complaints

Migrant farm workers pick strawberries in a field.
Migrant farm workers in Abbotsford, B.C. in September 2019. (Maggie MacPherson/CBC)

A law professor who runs an Ontariolegal clinic for migrant farm workers says a new Senate report that lays out ways to updateCanada'stemporary foreign worker program doesn't do enough to address thepower imbalance between migrant workers and their employers that rests at the heart of the system.

"There's a false equivalency in the whole report between employers and workers," saidVesanthiVenkatesh, anassociate professor of law at the University of Windsor."Economic interests are made equivalent to a workers' rights to be free from exploitation and oppression."

Canada is looking overhaul the nation'stemporary foreign worker program, which began with a few hundred Jamaican farm workers in 1966 and has since grown into abureaucracy that controls the working conditionsof700,000 foreigners working inindustries ranging fromagriculture, to seafood processing to personal caregiving.

In the last two decades, the program has been steeped in controversy, with allegations of abuse and poor treatment, including injured farm workersbeing sent home without treatment, andcaregivers promised permanent residency, only to have their Canadianemployers refuse to fill out the necessary paperwork.

Venkatesh's comments came in response to a Senate report published Tuesday withsix recommendations for reform, includinga new commissioner of Migrant Workers whowould monitor the program, empower migrant workers and be a single point of contact for allegations of abuse and mistreatment, all while regularly reporting to Parliament.

Report fails to address worker vulnerability: lawyer

The report fails to seize on the temporary status of the workers themselves, which goes to the heart of their vulnerability, saidVenkatesh, who also administersthe Migrant Farm Workers Legal Clinic.

Unlike Canadians, migrant workers do not earn overtime or holiday pay and are not guaranteed a minimum income should their contract be abruptly terminated, she said.Because of their precarious status, workers have few incentives to report abuse because, even if the authorities step in to discipline the employer, the worker is often blacklisted.

"We deal with these workers all the time," she said. "Once the worker is blacklisted for asserting their rights, for example, it's very difficult for them to get a job within that sector becauseemployers work in collusion."

Venkateshsaid migrant workers are exempt from many of the workplace rights Canadians take for granted, including overtime, holiday pay anda minimum guaranteed minimum income as part of a work contract.

"Thereare no remedies that gave workers income security, permanent status and moresystemic power," she said.

People pick strawberries in a field.
Mexican and Guatemalan workers pick strawberries at the Faucher strawberry farm, Tuesday, August 24, 2021 in Pont Rouge Que. (Jacques Boissinot/The Canadian Press)

The report also lays out five other recommendations:

  • A three-year phaseout of employer-specific work permits that wouldmake workers less vulnerable to exploitation by giving them a chance to changeemployers.
  • Including temporary foreign workers in the federal government's immigration level plans and offering more transparency around the transition to permanent residency.
  • An overhaul of the system'senforcement apparatus, including unannounced inspections of workers' accommodations.
  • More education for migrant workers when it comes to their rights, specifically around access to Canada's healthcare system.
  • Better information sharing between government departments.

Ontario farm group looking for more efficiency

A news released published Wednesday by the Ontario Fruit and Vegetable Growers' Association, an industry group that employs 17,000 migrant workers annually, said it "appreciate [sic] the balanced recommendations into solutions for temporary and migrant labour in Canada."

Thereare no remedies that gave workers income security, permanent status and moresystemic power.- Vesanthi Venkatesh, associate professor of law at the University of Windsor who studies labour migration and discrimination

The group said it had been asking the federal government for years to streamline the system, from a complex web of programs that spans different departments into what it called a "one-stop shop."

Bill George, the labour section chair of the Ontario Fruit and Vegetable Growers Association, who also runs a farm near Beamsville, Ont., said he was pleased with the recommendations, but would not go into much detail.

"The document is, to me, right now, is quite high level," he said."There's not a lot of meat on the bones yet, so we'll be looking forward toputting meat on the bones if the government decides to act on any of these recommendations."

George said among the recommendations that is most needed is the creation of a migrant worker commission, something believes would cut down on duplication between government departments.

"I think what what we like is we want to see more efficiency in the administration of the program," he said.

The Senate report gave no timeline for, if, or when, a plan would be implemented, only the hope that"the experiences and solutions shared in this report will help inform this plan and improve the program to the benefit of employers and migrant workers alike."