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Kenney marks 20,000 immigrants under 'experience' class

Immigration Minister Jason Kenney is marking a milestone in efforts to retain international students and skilled foreign workers: 20,000 have become residents under the "Canada Experience Class." Now it's getting even easier for temporary foreign workers to stay.

Harper government making it easier for temporary foreign workers and international students to immigrate

Immigration Minister Jason Kenney announced a new benchmark Friday in his government'sattempts to recruit and retain international students and temporary foreign workers who've lived in Canada.

The Canada Experience Class a centrepiece of the government's economic immigration reforms has admitted 20,000 people since its creation in 2008.

"For too long we have seen too many newcomers struggling to survive in our economy," Kenney told a news conference in Toronto. "That simply isn't acceptable. Especially in an economy with large labour shortages."

The 20,000th person to beome a permanent resident under the program is Gaurav Gore, a University of Toronto MBA student, who now works for a major Canadian bank.He attended Friday's announcement.

At a time when the world's economic outlook is shaky, theHarper government continues to try to secure Canada's long-term prosperity by emphasizing economic immigration.

The Canada Experience Class was designed to better attract and retain the "best and brightest" who come to Canada asinternational studentsor temporary foreign workers.

Kenney also announced that he's speeding up the process for temporary foreign workers already working here: now they will need to show they have only one year of Canadian work experience, instead of two

Before the category was created, foreign students and temporary workers had to return to their home countries and get in line, often for years, if they wanted to come to Canada permanently.

"Until we created the Canada Experience Class four years ago, when we had bright young foreign students come to Canada and complete their degrees or diplomas, we then asked them at the end of their academic program to leave Canada. And if they wanted to immigrate, to get in the back of a seven- or eight-year-long queue in our skilled worker program," Kenney said.

The government says this program has become Canada's fastest-growing immigration stream. The governmentmarked the 10,000th permanent residentin this class last November.