Category Archives: Assignment 2

Widespread citizenship fraud reveals cracks in application process, Auditor General finds

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Immigration, Refugees, and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) isn’t doing enough to prevent citizenship fraud. This is according to the Auditor General of Canada’s Report that came out this year.

The audit found some people were granted citizenship based on incomplete information or without all of the necessary checks being done. In other words, people were able to cheat the system and gain the benefits of Canadian citizenship without going through the proper hoops and channels.

Further analysis found multiple gaps in the IRCC’s ability to prevent fraud: they had trouble checking for problem addresses, they had trouble identifying altered documents, and there was a general lack of communication with the RCMP in regards to past criminal behavior of applicants, which could affect the status of the application process.

application2

Problematic addresses

Lee Cohen, an immigration and refugee lawyer in Halifax, Nova Scotia, said he personally has seen people who have falsified information, who have been caught and who are being challenged by the citizenship authorities.

“I have seen one or two common threads in those applications – almost all of those people who have come to see me because they’ve been caught with false addresses used an immigration consultant,” Cohen said.

But more than a few still fall through the cracks. The audit, which looked at roughly 10,000 addresses of just over 100,000 adults who had submitted citizenship applications in 2014 and had been granted citizenship by June 2015, found dozens of problematic addresses at first glance.

The audit sites problems with the IRCC’s Global Case Management System (GCMS), a database for Canadian addresses. The report found that GCMS was not updated consistently.

Moreover, there was inconsistent follow-up on addresses identified as problematic in the database, as well as inconsistent identification of applicants who were using the exact same address as other applicants.

Forging documents

Roya Golesokhi, an Iranian immigration consultant working in Toronto, said many applicants are met with increasing demands by the government. That may be a reason why some are pressured to lie.

“If they correctly respond to [questions] on the application form, they would not be able to gain immigration status in Canada,” said Goleshokhi.

She said many people forge employment and financial documents in order to comply with rules that stipulate immigrants need to divulge where they get their money from. They also try to misrepresent the amount of time they spent in Canada in order to meet the requirements for residency.

“The government doesn’t know when you leave,” said Golesokhi. “The only way they can keep track [of people] is with the entrance stamp.”

Miscommunication with the RCMP

To be eligible for citizenship, an applicant cannot have been convicted of certain offences, be in jail, or be on probation.

Yet when that does happen, sometimes the IRCC doesn’t even check. That’s because there’s a lack of communication between the department and the RCMP.

The audit found once the initial criminal clearance check is completed (very early in the citizenship application process), the Citizenship Program has no systematic way of obtaining information on criminal charges from police forces. This means that if an application is arrested after passing the clearance check, IRCC may never find out.

Moreover, some citizenship officers still granted citizenship to applicants even when they knew they had criminal backgrounds.

The audit found 4 cases of fraud within the IRCC itself.

Cpl. Jennifer Clarke, media-relations officer for the Nova Scotia RCMP, said in an email that “the RCMP will work with IRCC to address the Audit’s recommendation.”

She said the RCMP will explore how and when the RCMP will share information about criminal charges against permanent residents and foreign nations

Clarke said this work is expected to be concluded by December 31, 2016.

B.C still won’t include First Nations group in oil and gas interests on their land

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As a child, Harry Deneron remembers his parents burying his grandmother at the north shore of the Maxhamish Lake in British Columbia.

Except as a member of the Acho Dene Koe (ADK) First Nations peoples, Maxhamish Lake was only known as Sandy Lake to Deneron and his family, as a part of their people’s territory. He was taught to see their land as one whole area— not broken up by three colonial boundaries. The ADK territory now spans across the Yukon, Northwest Territories and B.C.

ADK land on the B.C side, where Deneron and 200 other ADK peoples live, may be of interest to Suncor Energy and the B.C government, according to documents obtained via a freedom of information request.

The documents, in the form of a briefing note to Aboriginal Relations Minister John Rustad, state that the Horn River Basin — where ADK live — is where oil and gas company Suncor has retained oil sand extraction rights.

But the ADK won’t be able to benefit from oil and gas development in the area as the province continues to shut them out of treaty negotiations to affirm their claim to the land they have resided on for centuries, said Deneron, chief of the ADK.

“That’s the rights that need to be settled. And that should happen soon,” he said. “We’re tired of being ignored.”

Deneron and the ADK have been looking to re-negotiate their treaty with provincial governments in all three provinces their territory crosses, as well as with the federal government.

The ADK previously signed Treaty 11 in the early 1920s, but it does not extend into B.C. In 2002 the ADK began the process of negotiating a new one within each province and territory they had claim to, with B.C’s Treaty Commission accepting the claim at the time.

Today, B.C is the only party that has not come to negotiations for a new treaty, with the Yukon, Northwest Territories and the federal government all at the table, said Bob Reiter, lawyer for the ADK.

“This isn’t a matter of asking for a huge share of anything here. It’s just they were on record as wanting to negotiate, and now they’ve been avoiding my clients since 2002,” said Reiter.

But without B.C’s involvement in the negotiations, the ADK residing in the province will live in uncertainty to whether they have official rights to the land, said Reiter.

Reiter and the ADK are prepared to go to court over the land claims, but it’s an expensive process that could take years, he said.

“This is not a legal issue. It’s pretty straightforward, they have to negotiate. It’s a political issue that I think is front and centre with respect to oil and gas,” said Reiter. “The stakes are so great.”

The Horn Plateau area is exclusively occupied by the ADK, he added.“They have cabins there, they have villages there,” he said.

Scott Fraser, the NDP critic for the Ministry of Aboriginal Relations and Reconciliation said he has questioned Minister Rustad about the ADK many times over the last few years.

Earlier this month he met with Rustad to discuss the ADK again, in which the Minister declined to visit the ADK’s B.C territory, said Fraser.

“He’s dismissing an entire group of people in a very colonial way, I’d suggest,” he said.

Suncor could use their claims to oil sands in the area as an opportunity to work with the ADK, which the province has failed to, he said.

“Maybe they can show the government and this Minister how it should be done,” he said. “This could be the push necessary for companies working on the land to adhere to the spirit of the UN declaration on the rights of Indigenous peoples.”

Government of Canada Access Request 

City of Vancouver Request

Government of British Columbia Request

Access to a previous request 

Questions:

What is the information?

The information in these documents contains briefing notes to Minister John Rustad of the Ministry of Aboriginal Relations and Reconciliation. The purpose of the notes are to brief Minister Rustad on an upcoming meeting with Suncor Energy in October 2014.

From which department did the pages come from?

These pages came from the Ministry of Aboriginal Relations and Reconciliation.

Why was this information helpful?

The information was helpful as it gave me insight into what the Minister was told prior to the meeting with Suncor. Information about where Suncor’s tenures are was important because where Suncor has holdings became the main part of the story. I would not have known about the ADK people without first knowing where Suncor has oil sands.

 

Parking and recrimination – playing the blame game in Centretown

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Over the last three years, there have been 850 complaints filed to the city about wrongfully attributed parking tickets in the Somerset ward, or rather the Centretown area. That’s more than 40 per cent of total parking complaints , even though the Somerset ward is the smallest in Ottawa.

Somerset Ward
Delineation of all the wards in the greater Ottawa area.
Somerset Ward
Somerset ward 14 delineation.

Mac Bruce-Fuoco had been parking in a residential area near Lees Ave. for the last nine months, free from fines or limitation times. So he was shocked when he received a ticket last week in that same spot. He then rushed to City Hall to fight his ticket.

“I was pretty confident because there was no sign anywhere,”said Bruce-Fuoco, a business student at the University of Ottawa.

But when he pleaded his case, he said the city official was quick to pull up a rule stating that parking authorities are allowed to ticket anyone who has been parked over three hours in a marked, or unmarked area.

“So the way I understood it is ‘gloves are off’ for anyone who isn’t in a paid for parking space or in a driveway. It just seems like a free-for-all,” said Bruce-Fuoco.

On the other hand, Troy Leeson, Ottawa’s deputy chief of Bylaw services in the parking division, seemed underwhelmed by the number of complaints, comparing it to the number of tickets Ottawa  gives out a year, which averages to about 350,000.

“Some of it might be related to an officer just punching a one instead of a two,” said Leeson. Since tickets are doled out according to license plate numbers it’s possible that simple human error might send an innocent citizen someone else’s ticket.

According to Leeson, the Somerset ward simply has more people parking there, which leads to more complaints.

The Centretown Local Area Parking Study was prompted last year by concerns held by a group of members from the community chosen to weigh in on city matters.

The study has outlined Centretown’s parking problems with relevant data. The numbers show the biggest concern of those who travel downtown is finding a place to park. A quarter of people polled stated that they frequently have trouble finding a parking space when driving downtown.



Parking on Elgin and its environing side streets are frequently over capacity, even though most parking is limited to an hour.



And yet, although this information is open to the public, city officials seem squeamish to speak more about the study. Leeson refused to comment.

Somerset ward Councillor Catherine McKenney wrote that she is unable to involve herself in parking ticket disputes, and did not comment on the study.

Lindsay Thomas and Scott Caldwell, both leading officials involved in the parking study, are listed frequently as those to call if more information was needed.

The City of Ottawa’s media office would not connect me with either of them. Rather the city refused to acknowledge any request related to the parking study at all.

Why the reluctance to speak about parking in Centretown?

In 2013, the city raked in nearly $20 million dollars in total revenue on parking tickets. Seeing as Leeson mentioned that Centretown had more instances of parking than any other area in the city, Centretown is no doubt a lucrative part of Ottawa’s income.

“I find that the way the bylaw is written is so that they can win 100 per cent of the time,” said Bruce-Fuoco.

The city officer did end up voiding his ticket, so in his case, at least 99 per cent of the time.

But now the young student is challenged to find a new spot that won’t empty his pockets, but won’t earn him a fresh ticket. A cumbersome struggle that many drivers must face in the city’s core.

The 1991 Gulf War: The beginning of gender integration in the Canadian Forces

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Canada is a world leader in terms of the proportion of women in its military. With a 15 per cent rate, the Canadian Forces have more women in uniform compared to other NATO countries where the average rate is 10 percent, according to the National Defense.

This achievement can be traced back to the role women played during the 1991 gulf war when Canada joined the international coalition led by the US to end the Iraqi occupation of Kuwait.

Richard Gimblett who served as combat officer of the supply ship recalls the Jan. 02, 1991, when nearly a quarter of the company of his ship sailing in the Persian Gulf was women. “We were about to become the first Canadian Forces unit to have women in combat”, he said.

Retired navy Pte. Sylivia Vickers was on board of the supply ship, HMCS Protecteur. She thanks the government for allowing women to go on front line because they were able to prove that they can do the job despite being called on short notice.

“We didn’t know what would be our role over there but we had really good military leaders who put us right in the front line. My main concern was representing women well,” she said.

Chief Warrant Officer Dianne Maidment who had spent ten years in the military at that time remembers receiving a call in the middle of the night saying that she had been deployed to a country she had never been before.

“For me it was a fantastic experience. Honestly, when they said we were the first women it kind of registered. Oh really? I didn’t realize we were the first women to deploy into an active zone,” She said.

“There were a lot of emotions; there was a lot of anxiety and excitement to go with it. But honestly, I was happy to be part of what was happening because something good was going to come out if this,” Chief Warrant Officer Maidment said.

In the gulf war, women served in the air, naval and at headquarters with no report of incident relating to gender-mixed environment. In the years following the success of the “Operation Friction” the Forces saw an increased in the recruitment of women.

From few hundreds female soldiers in 1990’s, Canadian Forces today has more than 14,200 women; making 15 percent of all Canadian soldiers, according to the National Defence and the Canadian Armed Forces website.

The increase of women in the Canadian Forces led to changes within the military including the design of equipment. Today, equipment such as combat boots and helmets, flak jackets and rucksacks are designed to be suitable for both men and women especially in terms of protection and comfort.

Today, women in the Canadian Army contribute to its external mission success because of various roles they play in place of men; according to Stéfanie von Hlatky and Christian Leuprecht in their article Women as professional soldiers: Canadian values on the front line.

They give example of Kosovo and Afghanistan where having a man search a woman at a checkpoint would be an inconceivable contravention of cultural norms in these societies.

Even though there have been challenges like recent sexual misconduct, Maidment is happy that women have grown to occupy many leadership positions within the Canadian Forces.

“There is no one day in 35 years that I have been serving that I regretted my decision to join the military and I honor each day I get an opportunity to do so, ” Maidment said.

 




 



Partner Assault Unit: Police must do more to combat domestic violence, experts say

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The number of people killed violently by family members in Ottawa between the mid 1980s and early 1990s could fill several neighbourhood blocks.

Most victims were women and lived in the same homes as their perpetrators.

After finding few charges were laid against domestic abusers, the Ottawa Police create a specific domestic-dispute squad in 1991 that aimed to charge more and encourage more women to report abuse.

Twenty-five years later, experts and members of police advisory groups on violence against women find the force has a long way to go to combat domestic violence successfully.

By 1991, Ottawa Police reported responding to hundreds of domestic abuse-related calls each week, according to reports by the Ottawa Citizen.

It was in February of that year that Police deputy at the time Brian Ford would work to create the force’s first Partner Assault Unit—one that still exists today— to change how police were responding to house calls.

City police were not charging many attackers even when they had evidence, said former deputy chief of operations and Ottawa police chief Brian Ford, who retired in 2000.

“There were a number of deaths over the years that were directly related to that and the escalation of violence when we weren’t charging was significant,” he said.

Click below for a 1991 Ottawa Citizen report about the squad

Ford said the newly created Partner Assault Unit incorporated charging even if a victim states they do not wish to press charges. The assailant is charged regardless if there is enough evidence, he said.

Between 1991 and 2000 the Partner Assault Unit handled over 10,500 cases according to a 2001 report by police on domestic homicide.

The report said the introduction of the squad decreased domestic homicide by 33 per cent in 2000.

Click below for graphs from the 2001 report on homicide rates

The Partner Assault Unit continues to mishandle some cases of domestic abuse despite calls for improvement, said Leighann Burns, executive director of Harmony House women’s shelter in Ottawa.

“We have not made very impressive gains in all that time,” said Burns, who was a member of the Violence Against Women Police Advisory Committee, a group made up of people who work directly with women affected by domestic violence.

She said University of Ottawa criminology Professor Holly Johnson’s 2014 report on how police handle domestic violence is an indication the force must improve.

Johnson surveyed 219 women who had phoned police to report violence on domestic abuse, sexual assault and harassment.

Through access to police data about the number of incidents and number of charges, it was found 54 per cent of partner abuse cases resulted in a charge over five years of data.

Charging at a rate of half or less than half are the same rates that existed prior to 1991 on an annual basis, according to Ottawa Citizen articles from that year.

Five recommendations were made for Ottawa police in Johnson’s report, including monitoring more closely complaints that come in and are dismissed and to implement better training, to combat embedded societal and cultural perceptions that women should be blamed for their abuse.

Burns said police consultations within the advisory committees centred on focusing on better police investigations in order to gather more evidence that could help lead to a charge.

“It’s a very difficult system to change. Fundamentally, at this point, I doubt they will willingly make the changes that are necessary,” she said.

Ottawa police are currently undergoing a strategic review to examine their organizational structure and how resources are developed, said acting Supt. Joan McKenna.

Police are also working to create a case manager position review cases where charges aren’t laid and work to ensure a person’s safety even if there’s no charge, she said.

“Everyday when we come to work, there are people in our cell block for domestic violence, 365 days a year,” McKenna said.

“Creating awareness for domestic violence is not just a police issue, it’s everyone’s issue,” she said.

Click below for a 2014 Statistics Canada infographic on family violence

QUESTIONS 

Document 1: 1991 Ottawa Citizen article

This document refers to the creation of a domestic-dispute squad and establishes why the creation of a squad was necessary. It refers to a study out of London Ontario that showed the benefits of charging even when a spouse does not wish to press charges. It indicates that prior to 1991, police viewed spousal abuse issues as within the family and not as a straight criminal matter. This began to change at this point.

I obtained this document through a search on the Canadian Newsstand Complete database, searching for Ottawa Citizen articles published in 1991.

This document was helpful because I was unaware the Partner Assault Unit at the Ottawa police was created 25 years ago. It also explained which people were involved in the creation of the unit as well as circumstances surrounding the creation.

Document 2: Graphs from a 2001 police report

This document shows rates of spousal homicide as well as homicide rates in general from the 1970s to the end of the century. It shows in comparison how many homicides are a result of spousal abuse, and it indicates that more often than not females are the victims, not the perpetrators. The way the data is laid out also indicates what police believed to be important in 2001 which was to understand whether spousal abuse rates and an increase in murders in 1999 were related.

I found this entire document here via Google searches during my research.

This document was helpful because overall the entire document explains the progress made since 1991 and figures that I also included in my article. It was an indication of where police believed they were at in terms of combating domestic abuse by that time, which was 10 years after the squad was created.

Search and Rescue

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This is a map of search-and-rescue operations in which the person who was lost had a unregistered beacon.

 

Source: National Defence