N.B. largely exempt from temporary foreign worker reduction - Action News
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New Brunswick

N.B. largely exempt from temporary foreign worker reduction

The measures to reduce temporary foreign workers announced by the federal government Monday do not apply to most New Brunswick employers.

Saint John is the only place in N.B. affected by changes to program

A bin filled with lobsters is in the foreground of the photo. In the background are workers at the lobster processing plant.
Seafood processors make up the majority of temporary foreign workers in New Brunswick. They are exempt from recent TFW reduction measures. (Robert F. Bukaty/The Associated Press)

The measures to reduce the number oftemporary foreign workers announced by the federal government Monday will have little effect in New Brunswick.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announceda cap on the percentage of low-wage foreign workers an employer can hire, and an automatic rejection of applications in some metropolitan areas on Monday. The announcement came after thenational unemployment rate reached6.4 per cent in June.

However, these measuresdo not apply toagriculture,food processing,fish processing, construction and health-care sectors. They also do not apply to metropolitan areas with less than six per cent unemployment rates, and do not apply to rural areas at all.

The goal is "to better capture urban centres with higher population densities, while avoiding potential negative impacts on rural areas with genuine recruitment challenges," said a federal government spokesperson Friday.

Seafood industry accounts for majority ofTFWs

The majority of temporary foreign workers in New Brunswick work in the seafood and agriculture industries.

According to figures fromImmigration, Refugee and Citizenship Canada, New Brunswick businesses hired about 8,400 temporary foreign workers in seafood processing since 2021, making up 65 per cent of all temporary foreign workers in the province.

The second-highest number is forfarm workers, at 1,300 since 2021, or 10 per cent.


Nat Richard, the executive director of the Lobster Processors Association, said the businesses he represents rely heavily on these seasonal workers andare relieved that these measures won't affect them.

"I've been involved in the industry for 14 years and labour availability remains a challenge," he said in an interview. "Our international workers make a critical contribution to the sector, complementing our Canadian workers."

Richard said he is concerned about the "nature and tone of the discussion"around the impact temporary foreign workers have on the labour market or housing,especially going into the election season.

"I find those discussions are not always anchored in fact," he said.

Medium shot of smiling man
Nat Richard, the executive director of the Lobster Processors Association, says the industry relies on temporary foreign workers. (Daniel St Louis/Submitted)

He saidtemporary foreignworkers make up a small number of temporary residents in New Brunswick, and employers have to prove they aren't able to find local workers before they're allowed to hire from outside the country.

"I think the housing issue is a lot more complex," he said.

Richard also said he's been seeing other changes to the program in recent years around clarifying employer responsibilities, and putting in place more worker protections.He said he welcomesthose changes.

Advocates have said much more needs to be done to reduce exploitation and rights violations of temporary foreign workers in Canada, some singling out New Brunswick's seafood industry.

Saint John the only area affected

A spokesperson for the federal government saidthe only census metropolitan area above the six per cent unemploymentthreshold in New Brunswick is Saint John.

According to data from Immigration, Refugee and Citizenship Canada,77 low-wage temporary foreign worker positions were approved in Saint John in all of 2023. Some of those positions may be granted again this year because they have to do with agriculture, but others, like estheticians, hotel front desk clerks and administrative assistants, maybe automatically rejected.


Trudeau also said the government is considering a reduction to the number of permanent residents Canada accepts each year.

According to Statistics Canada, New Brunswick gained 50,000 people in total in 2022 and 2023. Permanent international immigrants make up 40 per cent of that number, data shows.