Canada to launch 'digital nomad strategy,' other measures to woo international talent - Action News
Home WebMail Thursday, November 14, 2024, 11:02 PM | Calgary | -3.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Politics

Canada to launch 'digital nomad strategy,' other measures to woo international talent

The federal governmentis looking to poach talent from abroad through three new initiatives announced at a technology conference on Tuesday.

Canada's immigration minister announced three new initiatives Tuesday to attract talent from abroad

Man in grey suit
Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Minister Sean Fraser. (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press)

Thefederal governmentis looking to poach talent from abroad through three new initiatives unveiledat a technology conference on Tuesday an announcement one industry group called "a breakthrough" forCanada's skills shortage.

Immigration Minister Sean Fraser announced what he called a "digital nomad strategy" that will allow workers with a foreign employer to stay and work in Canada for up to six months. If they get a job offer while in the country, he said, they can remain in Canada even longer.

He said those workers will "spend money in communities in this country."

Fraser's remarks to the Collision tech conferencein Toronto were focused onthe need to attract qualified workers to Canada's technology sector. Some of his announcements were targeted specifically at that industry part of what theministry is calling a "tech talent strategy."

By the end of this year, Fraser said, the federal government will be developing an immigration stream for "some of the world's most talented people that will be able to come to Canada to work for tech companies, whether they have a job offer or not."

He did not explain exactly who will qualify or how many people will be admitted to the stream. A news release issued afterhis remarks said the government will create an "innovation stream" under its international mobility program for skilled workers who are "in select in-demand occupations" or are destined for work withcompanies the government selects as "contributing to our innovation goals."

The third new program announced Tuesday was specifically aimed at the United States. By July 16, Fraser said, the government will create anopen work-permit stream to allow 10,000 AmericanH-1B visa holders to come and work in Canada.

In its news release, the ministrysaid the program will also provide for study or work permits for their family members.

H-1B visas allow foreign nationals to temporarily work in the U.S. in certain specialized occupations, including the technology sector. Tech companies went on a hiring binge during the pandemic but have since starting laying people off in large numbers.That's left a lot of H-1B visa holders scramblingto find new jobs beforethey're forced to leave the U.S.

Fraser said he's been watching that dynamic very closely and sees it as an "opportunity" for Canada.

'Starved for talent'

The Council of Canadian Innovators,a group chairedby former Research in Motion CEO Jim Balsillieto advocate for the Canadian technology sector, praisedthe new programs as a strong step toward filling a serious skills shortage.

"Canadian companies are starved for talent and the reality is we're not currently training enough," said Nick Schiavo, the council's director of federal affairs."The announcements today are such a breakthrough and such a game-changer."

Schiavo said the new pathway for H-1B holdersis especially promising because it focuses on workers who already have cleared a vetting process.

"We just don't have enough talent here, so the faster we can get that talent that has been vetted and accredited in the UnitedStates into our companies, into our communities,the better," he said.

As for the digital nomad strategy, Schiavo said it will build linkages with talented people who will be more likely to invest their time and skills in Canadian companies.