All posts by Meagan Simpson

Foreign Workers are waiting longer for approval to work in Canada

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Foreign workers hoping to find jobs in Canada are waiting twice as long for their permits to be approved compared to four years ago.

According to an analysis of data collected from Citizenship and Immigration Canada there has been a steady increase since 2010 in the amount of time it takes for the majority of temporary workers permits to be assessed.

Below shows the number of days it took in 2014 for permit approval in different cities across the world.


For example four years ago people applying from countries in Asia and the Pacific generally waited 70 days for their applications to be approved while in the last year wait times have risen to 196 days.

Cities that saw the greatest increase over the past four years in wait times:

There are a many factors that could be causing these wait times said Chris Solio of Migrant Workers Alliance for Change.

He speculated that a reduction in the number of people working for Canadian Immigration Canada has created a backlog. “The people who would be processing those work permits (is fewer) compared to the number of work permits.”

However differing permit requirements for different countries plays a large part in the delays. Immigrants from certain countries face higher restrictions and requirements than others. “The country of origin is a big part of it in how fast or how slow your work permit will be generated,” said Solio, (If applications aren’t) properly done then that would add into the delay or speeding up of your work permit.

Some of those differences depend on whether or not the country a worker comes from requires a visa to enter Canada.

Amy Casipullai, Senior Policy and Communications Director for Ontario Council of Agencies Serving Immigrants (OCASI) said problems arise with the way the Canadian government ‘divides the world’.
“Some of the workers who come in are from countries where they don’t need a visa to come to Canada, generally countries in the global south have a visa restriction and countries in the global north don’t,” she said.

Two cities facing some of the highest permit wait times in the past year were Chandigarh, India and Manila, Philippines. Both countries require potential workers to apply for a visa plus a temporary work permit.

“Living caregivers who come from the Philippines will be waiting longer for their work permit as opposed to somebody in Hong Kong or in the Middle East,” said Solio.

Caregivers are one of the longest running temporary worker programs in Canada, it is known as the Live-in Caregiver Program (LCP). People from outside Canada come to work as nannies and caretakers for the elderly.

Casipullai said she has also heard complaints from LCP employers about long delays for permit approval.

According to Solio people living in the Philippines will sometimes even move to countries or cities where they know application approval will be quicker. He says there are major problems in this profession when Canadians who require care are not receiving it due to long delays for permit approval.

However not every profession is effected equally. Temporary workers are typically divided into two categories, high skilled workers and low skilled workers, though Canada also has large caregiver and agricultural worker programs.

High skilled workers who are recruited by Canadian companies can often get around the long wait times by hiring immigration lawyers or by using intra-company transfers argued Solio.

Agricultural workers are also tend to receive a quicker turn around for approval said Casipullai. “Those workers come in year in and year out,” she said, “and I haven’t heard of any delays in that area.”

Mexico is one of the countries where seasonal agricultural workers tend to come from. Its wait time for example is as short as 14 days in Mexico City. This has been fairly consistent over the past four years with the longest wait reaching only 18 days in 2011.

Things are not so easy for low skilled workers, who make up the majority of applicants said Casipullai. She said despite attempts by government to say most of the people using the temporary worker program are high skill that it seems like the majority are low skill.

These people travel to Canada because they know there are jobs here said David Onyalo of the Canadian Labour Congress. Even though they are considered low skilled many of them need to travel to Canada in order to find employment.

When asked to explain the differing processing times Citizen and Immigration Canada (CIC) responding by saying “work permit applications are considered on a case-by-case basis on the specific facts presented by the applicant in each case.”

They argued “the number of applications received, the complexity of the case, the response of applicants to requests for additional documentation or information, among other factors.”

In light of the complaints of abuse of the program in the last year CIC has attempted to create changes to improve the program. In an attempt to focus the program on high skilled workers they have imposed conditions on employers making it harder to hire foreign workers.

This has the potential to increase the negative impacts that are already being felt for low skill workers. Those not recruited by a company will likely have increased difficulty being approved for a permit, which is likely to result in even slower approval times in the future.

Here you can find the safety regulations for temporary workers.

Increased number of fake money found across Ottawa

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By Meagan Simpson

Despite safer polymer bills cases of counterfeit arrests rose in Ottawa from 2012 to 2013, the latest year for which statistics are available.

According to an analysis of statistics collected from the Ottawa Police, the cases of reported counterfeiting went from 66 in 2012 up to 162 in the following year, an increase of 145 percent.

Wards across Ottawa experienced this trend even as the Bank of Canada was rolling out its new polymer bills from 2011 to 2013. (Click here for announcements of new bills: 100, 20, 5&10)

The wards experiencing the highest increase were Gloucester-Southgate which saw 600 percent increase and Somerset which saw a 500 percent increase.

Local expert and co-author of ‘Faking It: A History of Counterfeiting in Canada’, James Powell was surprised to hear that counterfeit currency rose in the city.

He says that the most likely cause of the increase comes from older, paper bills rather than polymers. He argued that they are much easier to counterfeit than the polymer notes.

Manuel Parreira, a senior regional representative for the Bank of Canada said the bank tries to keep bills secure by changing banknotes every seven to 10 years. Polymers were chosen for their safety the material makes it difficult to duplicate, he said.

“We were able to put a number of different things on the polymer; transparency, holography and other security elements,” said Parreira.

Safety features of the new notes include the transparent window and images, raised ink and small, specially placed numbers.

However, it is the transition period from paper to polymer bills that is attracting counterfeiters. They are using this time to take advantage of businesses in across Canada and Ottawa.

Erica Foster is an employee of a TD Canada Trust branch in Ottawa and has experienced the effects of counterfeiting. She found herself in possession of four $100 counterfeit bills earlier this year.

“We only noticed it once we compared it to a bunch of other bills. The four bills that were brought in looked identical to each other,” she said. A fellow employee only caught the counterfeits while counting cash in the back and noticed a discrepancy in size.

Parreira says that as the old paper series come out of circulation, they get targeted. “(The current) increase in counterfeiting is specifically of the paper notes,” he said.

The trend is country-wide. According to the RCMP’s statistics, the number of counterfeit bills passed went up in 2013 despite an eight-year decrease since 2004.

In 2004, crooks tried to pass more than 500,000 counterfeit bills, the highest in many years. It was those numbers that convinced the Bank of Canada to innovate its bank notes and influenced the introduction of polymer notes.

Despite the increased security, even new $100 polymer bills have been counterfeited. British Colombia had incidents last year of the fake bills being passed, the first time counterfeit polymers had been discovered in Canada.

Courtesy of Maclean's
Courtesy of Maclean’s

According to Parreira using fake polymers is unusual, because they have numbered in the hundreds versus the tens of thousands of counterfeit paper notes from previous years.

Despite the recent spike Powell said, “As time goes by and all those 2004 and earlier series are withdrawn from circulation you’re not going to be left with a whole lot of counterfeits.”

The easiest way to decrease counterfeit bills Parreira argued is vigilance on the part of Canadians. “The key to stopping counterfeiting in Canada is not by making a note that has more security features but by making sure that the consumer uses the security features that are on there.”

Soaring tuition fees in Ontario hit students where it hurts

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by Meagan Simpson

tuition_fees_0
Canadian Federation of Students protesting tuition increases, from Rabble

Students in Ontario are digging deeper in their pockets to pay for university than any other province in Canada according to recent statistics.

A report published by Statistics Canada revealed that the average tuition in Ontario is 42 percent higher than the average tuition across Canada. The province’s university students are currently paying around $7,539 for this school year, compared to the Canadian average of $5,293.

Ontario’s tuition fees are consistently higher then any other province and have also been rising at one of the highest rates. Since 2012 tuition has risen at 4 percent each year, which for students means an additional $300 a year.

The province’s Ministry of Education regulates tuition fees. One of it’s policies is placing a cap on the allowable amount tuition can rise in one year. In 2013 they decreased the cap for undergraduate tuition from 5 percent down to 3 percent.

Yet analyzing the numbers from Statistics Canada shows that the province’s tuition rose 3.9 percent from 2013 to 2014, regardless of the 3 percent cap.

Canadian Average Tuition
Canadian Average Tuition

Reza Moridi the Minister of Training, Colleges and Universities argued that the numbers aren’t as bad as they seem. The student financial assistance programs in Ontario are one of the best in Canada, he said, offering as an example the 30% Off Tuition grant that was implemented in 2012.

Moridi said, “Once all government supports are factored in, the students with the greatest need pay substantially less tuition and virtually no student pays the full sticker price.”

However not everyone agrees with Moridi. The Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives released a recent report stating that such grants do not apply to all students and do not reduce tuition fees.

The 30% Off Tuition grant only applies to certain students. It excludes part-time students, students who have been out of high school for more than four years and those over a certain income level.

Moridi states that the grant is still useful for many students. “[The grant] helped approximately 230,000 college and university students in 2013 to 2014 alone,” said Moridi.

If the numbers are correct the amount of students who benefited from the grant were less than half of students enrolled in university and college programs across Ontario according to enrolment numbers from the Association of Universities and Colleges Canada.

The report from the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives also predicted Ontario’s students would be paying $9,483 by the year 2017. In contrast it predicted the average Canadian tuition would be $7,000.

Student organizations like the Canadian Federation of Students (CFS) are protesting such high increases. The CFS supports students and works for their rights across the country and in each province. It released a statement in May, denouncing the provincial government of Ontario’s treatment of tuition fees.

In the release it argued that the Liberal government’s policies have made Ontario the most expensive province for post-secondary students. It states, “This government is condemning a generation to a future of financial insecurity and uncertainty.”

Despite government grants and protest from student unions like CFS, tuition in the province is still on the rise and doesn’t appear to be stopping anytime soon.