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Canada Border Services Agency - CBSA, News

Transit programs – Disruptions to travel through Canada

September 26, 2019 nkic

The instructions related to the Canadian China Transit Program (CTP) and the Transit Without Visa (TWOV) Program have been updated to include the following description of disruptions to travel through Canada:

Passengers in some situations are no longer exempt under the CTP or TWOV Program from the visa requirement. They now need to see a border services officer for examination before they can continue traveling. This applies to passengers who either:

  • miss a connecting flight at a Canadian airport
  • are being refused entry to the United States (US)

Outdated and irrelevant information regarding procedures for both programs has been removed. The criteria foreign nationals must meet to be eligible for the programs have been clarified.

Please Contact Us for more information.

NKIC Newsletter - September 2019
Canadian Federal Immigration Program, News

Lock-in age of dependent children for immigration applications

September 26, 2019 nkic

The immigration application instructions regarding dependent children have been updated to clarify the age lock-in date for dependent children of:

  • Home Child Care Provider Pilot applicants
  • Home Support Worker Pilot applicants
  • protected persons who are applying for permanent residence

The following note has been added for applications received on or after August 1, 2014, from protected persons applying for permanent residence:

  • Although the age is locked in at the time of the refugee claim, the applicable definition of “dependent child” is the one that is in effect at the time IRCC receives the complete application for permanent residence from the principal applicant.
  • For example, in the following case, the child qualifies as a dependent child:
    • A permanent residence application is received on July 7, 2019 (the applicable definition is “under 22 years of age”).
    • A child included in the application is 24 years old when the application is received.
    • On the day the refugee claim was made, the child was 21 years old.

Please Contact Us for more information.

NKIC Newsletter - September 2019
Canadian Federal Immigration Program, Canadian Work Permits, News

IRCC launches 2 new pilot projects for caregivers

July 29, 2019 nkic

IRCC has launched 2 new pilot projects that will help caregivers who are coming to Canada make this country their permanent home: the Home Child Care Provider and Home Support Worker.

The Home Child-Care Provider Pilot (HCCPP) and Home Support Worker Pilot (HSWP) opened for applications on June 18, 2019, replacing the expiring Caring for Children and Caring for People with High Medical Needs pilots.

Under the new pilots, caregivers who are not yet in Canada get a work permit if they have a job offer in Canada and meet the standard criteria for Canada’s other economic immigration programs. Once they are working in Canada, caregivers can gain the required 2 years of Canadian work experience and qualify for permanent residence.

These pilots also include occupation-specific, rather than employer-specific, work permits. These permits allows caregivers to change employers quickly when necessary. Open work and study permits are also available for the caregivers’ immediate family, which helps families come to Canada together. Employers hiring a caregiver through the new pilots are using a new job offer template to do so instead of the Labour Market Impact Assessment process.

Most importantly, these pilots provide a clear, direct transition from temporary to permanent resident status, ensuring that caregivers are able to become permanent residents quickly, after they have met the work experience requirement.

Please Contact Us for more information.

NKIC Newsletter - July 2019
Canadian Federal Immigration Program, Canadian Immigration, News

Canada’s Rural and Northern Immigration Pilot

July 29, 2019 nkic

About the pilot

The Rural and Northern Immigration Pilot is a community-driven program. It’s designed to spread the benefits of economic immigration to smaller communities by creating a path to permanent residence for skilled foreign workers who want to work and live in 1 of the participating communities.

We’re partnering with these communities to test new approaches to:

  • use immigration to help meet local labour market needs and support regional economic development
  • create welcoming environments to support new immigrants staying in rural communities.

This pilot will help increase long-term retention of skilled newcomers to rural areas by working with:

  • community-based partners
  • other federal government partners
  • provincial and territorial governments

About the process

Skilled workers

As a candidate, you need to find a job with an employer in 1 of the participating communities.

If a community endorses you and you’re successful in applying for permanent residence, you’ll then move there to work and live.

The application process for eligible candidates will begin as early as fall 2019. IRCC will provide more information at that time.

Quick facts

  • Throughout the summer, the government will begin working with selected communities to position them to identify candidates for permanent residence as early as the fall 2019.
  • Communities will be responsible for candidate recruitment and endorsement for permanent residence.
  • Newcomers are expected to begin to arrive under this pilot in 2020.
  • Communities worked with local economic development organizations to submit an application which demonstrated how they met the eligibility criteria by March 11, 2019.
  • The Atlantic Immigration Pilot was launched in March 2017 as part of the Atlantic Growth Strategy. The 4 Atlantic provinces are able to endorse up to 2,500 workers in 2019 under that pilot to meet labour market needs in the region.
  • Rural communities employ over 4 million Canadians and account for almost 30% of the national GDP.
  • Rural Canada supplies food, water, and energy for urban centres, sustaining the industries that contribute to Canada’s prosperous economy.
  • Between 2001 and 2016, the number of potential workers has decreased by 23% percent, while the number of potential retirees has increased by 40%.

Please Contact Us for more information.

NKIC Newsletter - July 2019
Canadian Federal Immigration Program, Canadian Work Permits, News

Canada’s New Agri-Food Immigration Pilot

July 29, 2019 nkic

Canada is launching a new 3-year economic immigration pilot that will fill labour shortages, particularly in meat processing and mushroom production, within the agri-food sector and help meet Canada’s ambitious export targets.

The Agri-Food Immigration Pilot will test a new, industry-specific approach to help address the labour needs of the Canadian agri-food sector, particularly in meat processing and mushroom production.

While immigration in the agricultural sector is largely based on seasonal workers, this pilot aims to enhance the benefits of economic immigration to the agri-food sector by testing a new pathway to permanent residence.

The pilot will seek to attract experienced, non-seasonal workers who can economically establish in Canada, and who support the ongoing labour needs of the agri-food sector.

In particular, the pilot will focus on attracting retail butchers, industrial butchers, food processing labourers, harvesting labourers, general farm workers, and farm supervisors and specialized livestock workers.

The occupations and industries eligible under the pilot include:

  • meat processing
    • retail butcher
    • industrial butcher
    • food processing labourer
  • harvesting labourer for year-round mushroom production and greenhouse crop production
  • general farm worker for year-round mushroom production, greenhouse crop production, or livestock raising
  • farm supervisor and specialized livestock worker for meat processing, year-round mushroom production, greenhouse crop production or livestock raising.

To be eligible to participate in the pilot, candidates must have:

  • 12 months of full-time, non-seasonal Canadian work experience in the Temporary Foreign Worker Program, in an eligible occupation in processing meat products, raising livestock, or growing mushrooms or greenhouse crops
  • a Canadian Language Benchmark level 4 in English or French
  • an education at high school level or greater (Canadian equivalency)
  • an indeterminate job offer for full-time, non-seasonal work in Canada, outside of Quebec, at or above the prevailing wage

Details on how individuals may apply for permanent residence through this pilot will be available in early 2020.

To complement the pilot, Employment and Social Development Canada is introducing changes that will benefit meat processor employers who are supporting temporary foreign workers in transitioning to permanent residence:

  • A 2-year Labour Market Impact Assessment will be issued to eligible meat processor employers, including employers who are using the Agri-Food Immigration Pilot or other existing pathways to permanent residence for temporary foreign workers in the same occupations and industries that are eligible for the pilot.
  • To be eligible, meat processors will be required to outline their plans to support their temporary foreign worker in obtaining permanent residency. Furthermore, unionized meat processors will require a letter of support from their union.
  • Non-unionized meat processors will have to meet additional requirements to ensure the labour market and migrant workers are protected. A tri-partite working group will be formed immediately to develop these requirements.
  • Adjustments will also be made to the way the limit (“cap”) on low-wage temporary foreign workers is calculated, taking into account efforts made by employers to help workers obtain permanent residence. 
  • Employers who have a recent history of recruiting workers who have made the transition to permanent residence could be eligible to be excluded from the limit calculation, a number of workers roughly equal to the number who are likely to achieve permanent residence in the near term.

The agriculture and agri-food industry is an important contributor to Canada’s economic growth and vitality, supporting 1 in 8 jobs across the country. Agricultural exports hit a new record in 2018, reaching $66.2 billion.

Over the past several years, industries such as meat processing and mushroom production have experienced ongoing difficulty in finding and keeping new employees.

This new pilot aims to attract and retain workers by providing them with an opportunity to become permanent residents.

The Agri-Food Immigration Pilot complements Canada’s economic immigration strategy, which includes the Atlantic Immigration Pilot, the Rural and Northern Immigration Pilot, the Global Skills Strategy, a revitalized Express Entry and an expanded Provincial Nominee Program.

Quick facts

  • Employers in the agri-food sector who intend to be part of the pilot will be eligible for a 2-year Labour Market Impact Assessment.
  • Temporary foreign workers will be able to apply under this pilot in early 2020.
  • A maximum of 2,750 principal applicants, plus family members, will be accepted for processing in any given year. This represents a total of approximately 16,500 possible new permanent residents over the 3-year duration of the pilot.
  • Addressing these labour market needs will help key industries in Canada’s specialized agri-food sector grow.

Please Contact Us for more information.

NKIC Newsletter - July 2019

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