Ottawa pledges $750M for Quebec immigration costs, sets no clear reduction targets - Action News
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Ottawa pledges $750M for Quebec immigration costs, sets no clear reduction targets

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said the federal government is open to transferring temporary immigrants out of Quebec to help relieve pressure.

Legault says 100% of province's housing problems are due to non-permanent residents

Two politicians speak in front of row of Quebec and Canadian flags.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Quebec Premier Franois Legault met in Quebec City on Monday. Immigration was a major topic of discussion. (Jacques Boissinot/Canadian Press)

Ottawa has rejected Quebec's demand for $1billion in compensation for receiving what Premier Franois Legault says is over half a million temporary immigrants.

The Legault government has been asking since February that Ottawa reimburse it for spending on social services to support migrants from 2021 to 2023.

The federal government is instead offering the province $750 million to support newcomers.

During a news conference after meeting with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau Monday in Quebec City, Legaultsaid he was "disappointed" that the federal government did not commit to quantifiable objectives to reducetemporary immigration levels.

He says Quebec is aiming to bring down the number of asylum seekers in the province by 50 per centwithin a year.

"I think it's about time that we put targets with figures," Legault said. "The problem is urgent so we cannot say we'll continue working for months and months about the principles."

"We'll take the money, but we'll continue to ask for more," he added.

Quebec has also asked to reduce wait times for issuing work permits to refugee claimants, with the aim of keeping them off social assistance.

Quebec Labour Ministry data shows the province received 80,151 requests for social assistance between March 22 and Nov. 21, 2023, compared to 72,221 for the same period in 2022. That jump in the number of households receiving social assistance is the largest in 25 years.

The monthly average of asylum seekers more than doubled from 2022 to 2023, going from 19,455 adults to just over 40,000, according to the ministry.

Ottawa open to French requirements

However, Legault welcomed that Ottawa is open to imposing French language requirements on certain types of non-permanent residents.

To address Quebec's concerns, the federal government is also consideringtransferring temporary immigrants to other provinces, tightening the issuance of visas, speeding up process times for refugees and deporting more quicklyasylum seekers whose requests were refused.

Asylume seekers arrive at irregular border crossing
The premier says a third of temporary immigrants in Quebec are asylum seekers. (Ryan Remiorz/The Canadian Press)

"At least the federal government recognizes that there is a problem. It even recognizes that it must act in the short term in a meaningful way, but it refuses to put figures," Legault said.

Quebec is arguing that its public services are being weighed down by 560,000 temporary immigrants in the province a number the federal government disputes.

Despite relying on Statistics Canada data, the premier says the discrepancy comes from Quebec counting the total number of asylum seekers who entered the province, whether or not their requests were accepted.

When breaking down the impact of their presence in Quebec in the last two years, Legaultsaidthe amount of new arrivals requires 120,000 housing units.

"We see that 100 per centof the housing problemcomes from the increase in the number of temporary immigrants," he said.

Quebec says about a third of those non-permanent residentsare asylum seekers.

WATCH | Refugee advocate responds to premier's immigration comments:

Refugee advocate says it's 'ludicrous' to blame housing crisis on immigrants

3 months ago
Duration 4:33
The Refugee Centre's Abdulla Daoud says the province and the federal government aren't making the most of the resources in place to help newcomers.

Immigration fuels Quebec population growth

Data from the Institut de la statistique du Qubec (ISQ) in May shows that nearly all Quebec regions experienced population growth between July 2022 and July 2023, particularly in Montreal and Quebec City.

Montreal experienced the strongest growth of all regions, with its population increasing by 89,600 a 4.3 per cent rise compared to the province's overall 2.3 per cent.

Temporary immigration was the main driver of the province's population growth, according to the ISQ.

Record gains were due to an unprecedented increase in non-permanent residents, such as temporary foreign workers, asylum seekers and international students. And while there was also an increase in permanent residents, it was on a much smaller scale.

Trudeau told reporters that he was waiting for the premier's plan before settingtargets. He saidQuebec controls more than half of the temporary immigrants in the province.

"Mr. Legault is talking about targets that he has without a plan to reduce the numbers that are directly controlled by Quebec," he said. "We need to do things that are responsible in a responsible way. That means understanding where the levers are and what each party is willing to do."

In light of the premier sayingthe number of temporary immigrants was the reason behindQuebec's housing shortage,Trudeau argued that housing, education,health andsocial services issues across the countrycannotsimply be blamed on immigrants.

"Quebecers and Canadians know very well that it is not always the best thing to do to target and say that everything is the fault of immigrants," he said. "This is something that some people bank on in their argument, but it is always more complex than that."

Constitutionalpowers committee not threatening:PM

At the end of the parliamentary session on June 7, the premier entrusted a committee of experts, including lawyers and public finance specialists, with finding strategies to maximize Quebec's autonomy while adhering to Canada's Constitution.

On Monday, Trudeau said the creation of the committee wasn't concerning.

"There's nothing inherently threatening about a province deciding to look at ways of improving our democracy," he said. "I know Mr. Legault is under a fair bit of pressure from the [Parti Qubcois] PQ right now, and he'll make the decisions he's focused on."

With files from Cathy Senay, Isaac Olson, Louis Blouin, Sbastien Bovet and The Canadian Press