Canada Immigration Reform: Jason Kenney Seeks Young, Educated, Skilled And Fluent Newcomers

Jason Kenney Immigration Reform

First Posted: 10/30/11 01:45 PM ET Updated: 11/02/11 04:39 PM ET

OTTAWA - Immigration Minister Jason Kenney has never suffered from lack of ambition and his latest goal is nothing short of reshaping and rejuvenating the Canadian workforce.

He envisions a nimble, efficient immigration machine that will help solve Canada's demographic imbalance and boost the country's competitiveness simultaneously.

Step one comes this week when he announces immigration targets for next year.

Kenney says when he is done with his multiple reforms of the system, the flow of newcomers into Canada will be predominantly young, well educated, highly skilled, and fluent in English or French.

They'll be admitted to Canada within a year of applying.

And soon after, they'll start paying taxes because they will have lined up a job prior to arrival or should be able to find one quickly once they land.

"Where we want to be in a few years time is a flexible, just-in-time . . . system where we admit people within a year of their application," he said in an interview with The Canadian Press.

"Where people with pre-arranged job offers are given priority, because they succeed best. Where we continue to see a better geographic distribution of newcomers. And where we can more flexibly change the (acceptance) criteria based on developments in the labour market," he explained.

"That's where we want to go."

But getting there is no easy amble. His critics don't disagree with his goal, but they have qualms about how he will achieve it.

"It's like saying 'we want to have sun in January.' We all want that," NDP immigration critic Don Davies said in a telephone call from Vancouver. "He doesn't explain how. He sets the goals but he doesn't say how we'll get there."

Kenney foresees a multi-step process that will require changes to many different parts of Canada's creaky immigration machinery.

His department has already undertaken major studies of what kind of immigrant succeeds in Canada and what kind fails. Kenney has followed up with extensive consultations and polling to find out what mix of immigration the public is willing to take.

Now comes the action. Kenney is expected to table the annual report on immigration on Tuesday. As usual, it will include his decisions about how many immigrants Canada should accept in 2012, and what kind.

The report will give a range of operational targets for each type of immigrant, from foreign skilled workers to parents and grandparents.

The key number is the overall number of immigrants Canada wants to let in — and that number is clearly not going up despite pressure from the opposition.

Under the Conservative government, Canada has let in an average of 254,000 immigrants a year, which is high by historical standards.

While some immigration observers argue that Canada could solve its demographic imbalance, workplace shortages, family demands and backlog issues all at the same time by opening the doors to far more immigrants, Kenney rejects that idea.

"I don't think realistically we can increase the levels of immigration in orders of magnitude," he said.

"I think it's important for policy makers to listen to public opinion on immigration and not become disconnected from public opinion, which has arguably led to some of the problems in Western Europe."

Immigrant-related riots in a few European countries over the past three years have become the spectre of what immigration policy makers around the world aim to avoid.

Kenney understands the logic in calculations that show Canada would have to at least triple the number of immigrants it lets in every year if it wanted to bring down the average age of its population and resolve expected labour shortages over time.

But Canada can't absorb that many people, he said, nor would Canadians accept that kind of inflow. He points to polling last year done by Human Resources and Skills Development Canada. It shows 47 per cent of respondents say immigration levels are just right, and 34 per cent say they are too high.

"That, in my view, is in no way a reflection of anti-immigration sentiment, because new immigrants are disproportionately likely to say that," Kenney said.

"So this is just, I think, a sense that Canadians have that there's a practical limit to how many people can be successfully settled each year. The broad political consensus in Canada is pro-immigration, but the caveat on that is to make sure that we're able to successfully integrate and employ the people who arrive."

Once the levels of immigration are decided, Kenney will be turning his attention to getting rid of the enormous backlog of potential immigrants waiting in the queue to have their applications processed. There are about one million names on the list, many of whom have been waiting for years and years for word from Ottawa.

He has suggested capping the number of applications in some areas, perhaps starting with the parents and grandparents of permanent residents. That would cut down the backlog, make for a younger inflow, and reduce Canada's costs for social services.

Then, once the numbers are under control, Kenney wants to focus on shaping the quality of the various immigration streams.

Next spring, the minister wants to re-jig the point system that allows economic immigrants to qualify. Youth and high-quality education will be worth more, and the emphasis on English or French fluency is likely to be increased. Quantity of education will matter less, the minister says.

But this isn't the first time Kenney has tried to reform the stream of economic immigrants, points out Davies.

Kenney has given three major directives over the past few years to limit applications and put certain professions at the front of the queue. The fact that he's rehashing the system yet again is a sign that his previous attempts have failed, Davies says.

It's not enough for Kenney to simply be the "Energizer bunny" when it comes to shaping Canada's future workforce and diverse population, he adds.

"I don't think he knows what he's doing. I think he should slow down."

By Heather Scoffield, The Canadian Press
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OTTAWA - Immigration Minister Jason Kenney has never suffered from lack of ambition and his latest goal is nothing short of reshaping and rejuvenating the Canadian workforce.He envisions a nimble, eff...
OTTAWA - Immigration Minister Jason Kenney has never suffered from lack of ambition and his latest goal is nothing short of reshaping and rejuvenating the Canadian workforce.He envisions a nimble, eff...
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01:40 AM on 11/01/2011
Does Kenney have any idea what the struggles are for new graduates finding work? Does he have any idea how much the recession will and is affecting Canada?
07:03 PM on 10/31/2011
Instead of letting more people in, Canada should promote and foster family growth internally. I am not saying cut off immigration completely, but there should be more government support for larger families in Canada (tax benefits, increase to child allowance) so that families can grow past one or two kids and do so without having to live in poverty. This coupled with a strategic and meaningful immigration policy will better help grow the country and maintain our values for freedom and liberty.
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BCSLAVE
Got a key?
09:02 PM on 10/31/2011
The Canadian government has always preferred to steal people away from other countries so it can avoid having to school and educate them before they become profitable for the Canada. Sadly, Canada only wants what it can exploit.
06:16 PM on 10/31/2011
Former GG is quoted as saying "... Canada's immigration model has been a success, adding that we aren't sure how we've achieved that success." http://www.ctv.ca/CTVNews/TopStories/20111022/adrienne-clarkson-immigration-benevolent-neglect-111022/

Why is the Royal Minister for Snitches screwing around with the underpinnings of Canada's immigration "success"? How does polling justify what he's doing? Why not understand why Canada's immigrants have succeeded and build from knowledge? My bad - we are talking about the no-facts CONS.
06:17 PM on 10/31/2011
I would like to hear from the Minster on the case of Iryna Ivaniv, her husband and four children:

Jason Kenney & Ukrainian Immigrants to Canada
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GyyrUTAF2wk
03:12 PM on 10/31/2011
So we'll have taxi drivers, seven eleven clerks and office cleaners who speak better English (as many of them are already well educated).
01:41 AM on 11/07/2011
This. I love having my chips and energy drinks rang up by a cashier who was a heart surgeon back in India. Not depressing AT ALL.
02:50 PM on 10/31/2011
Living in a certain suburb of Toronto that is dominated by one specific immigrant group, I can see both sides of this. The young men come here and get a job, usually something below their education level (read: doctors driving cabs) then they send home for their wife, their parents, her parents, his siblings, her siblings, aunts and uncles, cousins, etc... so you get at least four non-working non-taxpayers for every worker/taxpayer we bring in, and he can't even fulfil his potential at that.

We need to get more brain power, but we also need to fast track professional equivilancies so we get them into the positions we need filled. Then we need to limit how many people they can sponsor, or we gain nothing by the increased tax base because one taxpayer doesn't cover 8 elderly parents, aunts, and uncles who can't work and drain our system.
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bbertaud
Je ne regrette rien, rien de rien
03:58 PM on 10/31/2011
Total BS, Canada allows only bringing spouses, children parents and grandparents...thus far. No cousins, uncles, aunts, neighbours etc.

On the other hand I agree with Kenney, we need more productive people and fewer freeloaders
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JackHoffman
Pundit
04:24 PM on 10/31/2011
Thinly veiled bigotry and fully exposed ignorance. Total bs.
02:34 PM on 10/31/2011
..."Kenney has followed up with extensive consultations and polling to find out what mix of immigration the public is willing to take."...
what the hell does that mean? Is this a memo from the PMO's office, rejigged by Canadian Press?
shouldn't someone ask - extensive consultations with who and...what were the questions asked in the poll(s).
Kenney is a bible school drop-out, never held a job in his life and owes his present status being a song and dance puppet for Harper. 5 will get you 10 that he played this one very carefully through the Reform support, fruit/veg growing slave traders and the Alberta government who specialize in low cost import of temporary workers.
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JackHoffman
Pundit
04:25 PM on 10/31/2011
Reform/Tea Party yahoos are running Canada.
01:42 AM on 11/07/2011
This comment gives me hope for Canada. Until the next election, anyway.
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02:28 PM on 10/31/2011
Our entitlement programs will come under massive pressure over the next few decades as baby boomers retire in huge numbers.

As such, these policies make a lot of sense.
02:48 PM on 10/31/2011
Do they really? Canada needs immigrants to replace its population because Canadians are not squeezing out enough babies, and there is a great black hole in the manufacturing sector that is not closing any time soon because few would accept low wages. Is this how Kenney proposes to deal the problems, by insisting immigrants are young, well educated, and already speaking English or French? You don't understand that Canada is the beggar, not the immigrants, but you will when the boomers begin to retire.
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turkeylurky
Just keepin it real........
03:27 PM on 10/31/2011
Yes, we do have a rapidly aging population.
That's one of the reasons we need younger immigrants.
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03:47 PM on 10/31/2011
Canada is one of the most desirable places in the world to live, if you don't mind the weather. This is particularly so when you consider that many well-educated people in foreign countries already have some English, it being the current global lingua franca, particularly in technology.

This gives Canada the advantage when it comes to choosing immigrants.
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Blodo
Time to build a better world
02:13 PM on 10/31/2011
It sounds good, but the devil is in the details. For example, one of the major hurdles highly educated immigrants face today is having Canadian educational institutions accept university credits earned in the country of origin. As might be expected with our patchwork university system, they are all over the map in terms of what they recognize from where. Any immigrant trying to get a ruling on equivalency of credits faces an endless purgatory of paperwork, referrals, unreturned calls and general bureaucratize. We need to do a much better job in that area if we are really looking for well educated new Canadians. Right now we have way too many economists, history teachers and engineers sweeping floors or flipping burgers.
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turkeylurky
Just keepin it real........
03:33 PM on 10/31/2011
I asume they know that prior to coming here and are prepared to make whatever sacrifices necessary so that their children can live the dream.
My parents came here with 4 children and no money at a time when you had to work on a farm for the first few years (or you didn't get into Canada).
After his farm duty, my father worked in a factory his entire life (even though it was well below his education and skill set) - but his kids all got good education and had great careers.
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JackHoffman
Pundit
04:27 PM on 10/31/2011
And we don't want to evolve from that?
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Blodo
Time to build a better world
05:18 PM on 10/31/2011
Indeed...most immigrants I have met fit that model very well. But the fact remains that we can do a better job over here in making things easier for them. By that, I am not suggesting giving them a free ride or overlooking gaps in their academic records. I mean, simply, speeding things up and being able to give them clear, unambiguous answers early in the process. Right now, we can't even do that.
01:47 PM on 10/31/2011
As an immigrant seeking permanent resident status, as a graduate of a canadian university, and as someone with a full-time professional job, I think the primary concern for the immigration folks should be focusing their attention on refugee claims. There are some legitimate cases, but i'd imagine many are not.

Immigration makes legal residence like myself reveal our entire personal history; makes us take English exams, and the entire process can costs thousands of dollars to complete. And even then, people like me are not necessarily guaranteed a permanent residence status. Yet, i'm shocked to find people who can barely speak English, unemployed, or working crappy jobs, with full Canadian citizenship.

Immigration should make things easier for people like me, and much, much tougher for those seeking Canadian citizenship under false or misleading pretense. I feel like the people who do things are right and properly are subjected to greater scrutiny than those who try to trick the system.
02:12 PM on 10/31/2011
Perfect post. Remember that you represent the pinnacle of the human species, and the perfect immigrant specimen. You should be given the VIP welcome away from the lower lifeforms whose claims are probably false or misleading pretense. Please answer your immigration interview the same way, with disdain for refugree claimants and anyone else below you who are in your way.
09:47 AM on 11/07/2011
trying going through the immigration process first, before you jump all over me.
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JackHoffman
Pundit
04:29 PM on 10/31/2011
This immigrant on immigrant take-down has to stop.
05:19 PM on 10/31/2011
It's not a take-down. It's just out of frustration. I've seen immigrants who exploit the system; they get their permanent residence and then bring their families over and try to find technicalities for financial gain. That kind of behaviour makes both legitimate refugees claimants and normal immigrants look bad. the result is that immigration has to subject EVERYONE to ridiculous levels of scrutiny.

I've applied for a study permit and work permit every year since I've been here. I've had to submit proof of funds every year. I've had to submit proof of employment and proof of full-time status every year. I now have a degree and a job. Yet, I will go through the same long process that a guy who can barely speak English will go through. THAT is unfair.

The real takedown is immigrants who try to trick the system; they take down future applicants.

Your application doesn't have to be perfect, but it shouldn't be made under illicit intentions.
01:44 PM on 10/31/2011
I heard a lot about well educated people who fell for this scam and who later moved back because they were flipping burgers with a graduate degree or a MD. What is really insensitive about it is the fact that they're draining the brightest minds from poorer countries(where they actually need them the most)to have them work as janitor or cashier. Here in the US, although we have a broken immigration system, no government official will have the audacity the brag about a lot of jobs being offered to immigrants. You can have a high skilled visa here if a company is ready to go through all the trouble to sponsor you.
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Glass Cannon
Let every eye negotiate for itself.
01:36 PM on 10/31/2011
Sun in January?

Move to Alberta. Don't mind the hellish cold.
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tnanimation
01:34 PM on 10/31/2011
So, Mr. Kenny, when these triple A rated immigrants you desire are in Canada (I do agree with you that we need qualified, educated people to come to Canada) and they desire to bring their family members who might NOT be as well educated or fluent, what will your department do with these applicants? Will they be turned away? Will applying to Canadian immigration now be conducted like a job interview?What if the applicant has some disabilities or is not considered 'young', but still is highly educated or possesses needed skills?
No doubt my post will bring out the immigration fear mongers. Can't wait to hear from CanadaStan.
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Scholastica8
RINOS & Bull-Mooses UNITE! People Matter!
01:01 PM on 10/31/2011
Why is it that nations look to immigrants to be well-educated, affluent, fluent in whatever language to fill highly skilled jobs?

It's because companies want these ready made employees who will work for lower wages. They don't want to have to share in the burden of educating and training the citizens of a nation.

So what you get are poorly educated citizens who resent well-educated immigrants... and who stymie the immigrants, but can't find a way to raise themselves.
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Glass Cannon
Let every eye negotiate for itself.
01:38 PM on 10/31/2011
You're absolutely right! Education is not a top priority. Today's Harper Government cannot do the heavy lifting to improve the current citizenry. Costs too much.
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02:25 PM on 10/31/2011
Canada has the highest proportion (47%) of citizens with post-secondary degrees of any nation, compared to 39% of Americans.

http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2009/11/06/ashe

The idea that Canadians don't want the burden of educating its citizens is nonsense.
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Scholastica8
RINOS & Bull-Mooses UNITE! People Matter!
03:08 PM on 10/31/2011
ROFLOL.... That's a 8% difference between a country that has what? 35 million? and a country that has 350 million. The whole nation has more than a million fewer than the state of California. I'm surprised that the difference is only 8%

However, that's beside the point. The point is... how many of that 47% are foreign-born, foreign-educated Canadian citizens vs native-born, Canadian-educated citizens. Also, how many of those degrees belong to an older generation that acquired them when Canada took social responsibility seriously.

That article you cited describes mentions the for-profit colleges. Those for-profit colleges in the US are what part of what is shredding US public and standard private institutions. The amounts of college loan money that is being funnelled into for-profit colleges to churn out students who then can't get jobs is phenominal.They have their money, so it doesn't matter to them if the student is ever able to get a job or pay back the loan. The US has decided that having an educated citizenry is all about profit at the moment, not benefits in the future.

Before you let Canada go that way (which is what the Harper gov't would like to see), think long and hard... examine your colleges and schools and check the figures to see if the numbers are fudged by importing college degrees.
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montezaro
12:40 PM on 10/31/2011
Immigrant officer (overseas) was very, very encouraging and assuring us to go ahead, because Canada needs people like us. Soon we realized that our education is the biggest obstacle, so we slowly slashed more and more of it in our resumes, but stopped at the secondary school. (Our credentials are recognized and yes, we are fluent in both languages. )
We never asked for the position equal to the one we had overseas, we were ready to take any job. One of us of sent more than 800 resumes. We worked many odd jobs...
For someone (among the comments) accusing me of: here I am, give me a good payed job attitude, is simply insulting. (And I've been insulted many, many times by people like you.)
It is sad to feel so much hate among people commenting.
And - don't you forget: except if you are Native Indian, your ancestors were immigrants.