Conservatives’ wage model will hurt all workers, unions say


Les WhittingtonOttawa Bureau
“Employers will benefit by having a pliable workforce available at a moment’s notice,” commented Naveen Mehta, general counsel and director of human rights with United Food and Commercial Workers Canada (UFCW).
He said the main thrust of the budget changes is to help business.
Hassan Yussuff, secretary-treasurer of the Canadian Labour Congress (CLC), said the Conservatives’ new measures will exert a “terrible downward pressure” on all workers’ wages in this country.
Full details of the new regime are only dribbling out, but the changes have already raised alarms among opposition MPs and some economists.
Of greatest concern, say critics, is the government’s move to allow employers to pay temporary highly-skilled foreign workers up to 15 per cent less (for low-skilled workers, it’s up to 5 per cent less) than the prevailing local wage under some circumstances. (The reduced wage threshold measures do not apply to temporary farm workers).
Human Resources Minister Diane Finley says the lower wages can be paid to temporary foreign workers only if the Canadian business’ other Canadian employees accept the same pay. But there is an important exception: If a company once had Canadian employees who were being paid below the average local wage but no longer has Canadian workers, as many temporary foreign workers as needed can be brought in and paid at up to 15 per cent below the local going rate, officials have disclosed.
The unions say the government is creating an unwieldy, confusing and unfair system for determining the wages of the increasing army of temporary workers from abroad now coming to Canada.
And critics say the new approach is a discriminatory system that flies in the face of Canadians’ commitment to fairness.
“Canada’s laws don’t support wage discrimination based on where you come from,” says Yasmeen Khan of MIGRANTE-Canada, an alliance of organizations supporting Filipino migrants, who comprise the largest number of temporary workers in Canada.
“Many people recognize the majority of migrant workers are people of colour and oppose wage discrimination based on race.”
Alyson Queen, a spokesperson for Finley, said the unions are misleading Canadians by saying that all temporary foreign workers will be paid less than Canadians. In most cases, she said, the new rules will ensure employers pay foreign workers the same as Canadian employees.
But union representatives say that, instead of reducing wages for temporary workers, the federal government should be expanding immigration quotas to allow skilled foreign employees to stay in Canada permanently. It does not improve the country’s long-term economic prospects to train thousands of foreign workers and then throw them out of the country after three or four years, said Mehta, of UFCW.
Concerns were also raised about measures in the budget legislation intended to pressure EI recipients to loosen their criteria for suitable employment.
On Monday, Flaherty confirmed the government intends to clamp down on EI claimants.
Flaherty said the government will expand the threshold for what is considered a suitable job for EI recipients. That means that those who pass up such employment could lose their EI benefits.
“There’ll be a broader definition and people will have to engage more in the workforce,” Flaherty told reporters.
He also indicated that he has little sympathy for EI recipients who are too picky about the jobs they will accept.
There is no bad job — the only bad job is not having a job,” he said.
Yussuff, of the CLC, said Flaherty “wasn’t thinking” when he made those remarks about jobs.
“Canadians to a large extent want to go work, but they also want to be paid a decent salary when they go to work,” Yussuff said Tuesday.
The expected changes to EI rules reflect complaints by Conservative cabinet ministers in recent months that Canadians are passing up jobs such as Christmas tree harvesting and leaving employers to bring in foreign workers to do the jobs. But opposition MPs say it’s a waste of peoples’ skills to force them to take positions for which they are over-qualified.
In the Commons later Tuesday, the NDP demanded more information on the planned changes to EI eligibility rules and asked whether the unemployed will be forced to take jobs well below their skill level.
Citing Flaherty’s remarks on jobs, NDP Leader Thomas Mulcair asked, “Does the prime minister actually agree that our teachers and our nurses should be taking jobs driving taxis rather than being given a chance to look for work in their own field?”
Prime Minister Stephen Harper replied that Canada’s job-creation record in recent years has been among the best in the industrialized world and the government wants this trend to continue.
“We anticipate the labour shortage is going to be a serious concern in the Canadian economy in the years to come and we want to make sure all Canadians have the opportunity” to work, Harper told the Commons.
Finley later provided a bit more information on how the EI changes will work. She said concerns that unemployed Canadians will be pressured to take jobs far from their homes are unfounded. “Canadians will be expected to take jobs appropriate to their skill level — in their area,” Finley said.

Sask Chamber of Commerce policies to smooth process for skilled immigrants


Reported by Stephanie Froese
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It’s a complex world for Saskatchewan’s business community when taking into consideration the vast policy resolutions being implemented by the Saskatchewan Chamber of Commerce (SCC).

Steve McLellan, CEO of the SCC said all of the resolutions voted on at a recent board meeting in Saskatoon carried significant importance.

One policy voted in aims to bring Labour Market Opinion (LMO) processing back to Saskatchewan.

The LMO is a government document that immigrant skilled workers need in order to obtain a working visa. 

A recent decision by the federal government saw the LMO offices move to Vancouver in an efficiency effort for western Canada.  The Vancouver offices now take LMO application from Saskatchewan, Manitoba and BC.

McLellan said that move caught everybody in Saskatchewan by surprise.

“They thought it would be an efficiency move. We’ve disagreed with that and we’ve been very clear with them on that challenge, as have our members and immigration consultants. We need to get that changed. We need local response times,” said McLellan.

McLellan said immigration of skilled workers is front of mind for most business people in Saskatchewan.

Having LMO processing back in Saskatchewan would be more convenient and more approachable for those workers, he said.

“There are individuals, both businesses as well as immigrants, who need to have access to those people and now with it being so far away there’s time zone issues as well there’s telecommunications issues of connecting with them,” said McLellan.

He said the SCC wants to use its influence to try to make the process as slick as possible while maintaining necessary safe guards. He said they are very confident that the LMO processing could come back to Saskatchewan.

Other policy resolutions focusing on the environment that were adopted during the Saskatoon meeting will have a bigger long term impact, said McLellan.

Among the 15 resolutions was a focus on better water management and a recovery strategy for woodland caribou. McLellen said these resolutions may not be well known to the general public but have big interest from environmental groups, the mining organizations. He said a water management strategy currently being worked on by the provincial government is a process the SCC has been very close to.

The federal and provincial political relms have the final say on changes the SCC would like to see implemented but McLellan said they have the mindset that if the SCC does their job right then policy will follow their guidelines.

“We go into each of the policy sessions with the belief that if we do our research correctly and we consult our members and the experts in the fields that we will have an awful lot of influence simply because it’s the best thinking on the particular issue,” said McLellan.

Immigration is Destroying Canada?


By Author: Max Chaudhary | May 8, 2012

The Globe and Mail recently published an article that advocated an increase in the amount of immigrants to Canada. As a Toronto immigration lawyer, I find the online comments section of such articles strangely compelling. The vast majority of the comments were anti-immigrant, some parochially and even racially so. One compelling example included a post which contained a link to an RCMP most wanted list – a list with pictures, the majority of whom were visible minorities. Such an assertion cannot be reconciled with the steady reduction of crime in Canada since the 70s despite the opening up of immigration to Canada during that period.
The article is no doubt portraying a positive view of immigration to Canada, focusing on the success of Steinbach, Manitoba, a small town, in integrating immigrants. This has resulted in the growth of the town. Astute commenters pointed out that the majority of immigrants don’t settle in small towns but rather, in Canada’s three or four largest cities (which drives up real estate values and strains infrastructure in those aforementioned cities).
There were also highly praised comments which were from self-confessed old codgers, who bemoaned the older, central neighbourhoods in Vancouver which have been apparently overrun by hoards of Asian people with large amounts of money.
The appeal to environmental degradation was cited (i.e. that more resources shall be polluted and farmland shall be paved over with subdivisions); this is a logical argument given that the current immigration and Refugee Protection Act (at section 3) is utterly silent on safeguarding the environment. However, given the dearth of investment and research into green jobs economic growth shall inevitably be tied to environmental degradation for the near future. Canadians state that they care about the environment, but behaviour suggests that care only insofar as it does not negatively impact their living standards. Perhaps pro-environmental advocates can push for a change to Canada’s immigration laws. I wish them the best of luck.
Another logical argument for reducing immigration was the assertion that there should be more encouragement for Canada’s youth to take up the skilled blue collar jobs that pay a decent wage, and a corresponding discouragement for certain children to enter university (which would theoretically reduce the need to import foreign plumbers and electricians). This is something that cannot be legislated, and moreover, this won’t address the fact Canadians do not want to work in low skilled jobs such as a Tim Horton’s in Alberta. I have seen firsthand the efforts by Tim Horton’s franchisees in Alberta who offer a higher wage resulting in little or no response from the Canadian-born labour market; the reason? – Local Canadians don’t want to work the night shift.
The fact that 2nd generation immigrants are as a group successfully integrated into Canadian society was ignored, due in part because such good news does not make for selling newspapers. Such good news is only apparent if one looks at specialized literature from academics such as Arthur Sweetman. News media compete for your attention by highlighting the dramatic problems of life like murder and sex and terrorism: if it bleeds, it leads. Thus, those without the life experience of meeting and interacting with different peoples, those only acquainted with minorities through a mug-shot on a police website come to caricatures and generalizations about minorities.
The more reasonable position taken on the online comments section was to reduce economic immigration during an economic downturn. This may make sense.

Canada wipes Federal Skilled Worker Program backlog

Canada
Canada (Photo credit: palindrome6996)

Around 280,000 applicants to Canada’s Federal Skilled Worker Program are to have their fees refunded as part of a bid to create a fast and flexible immigration system. The March Budget 2012 set aside 130 million Canadian dollars to cover the cost of refunds and clear the astonishing backlog of unprocessed applications.
Jason Diggs, Sales Director for Anglo Pacific, explains, “The applicants affected are those who applied prior to 27 February 2008 and are thought to number around 280,000. They will be encouraged to re-apply under new programs that focus on work skills – a similar path to the Australians who will replace their points system with SkillSelect from 1 July 2012. The 20,000 applicants who have already passed the selection criteria stage will continue to have their applications processed. Of course this is a major blow to the 280,000 people who have been held in limbo for four or five years or more as a refund will set them back to square one, however the replacement skills-based system promises to be quicker and more efficient.”
The phased-out Federal Skilled Worker Program is set to be substituted for a Federal Job Bank where skilled migrant applications will go into an online selection pool. Employers and provincial governments will then be able to dip into the pool and pick the best-fit employees to fast-track through the application process to get them working within months rather than years. This will give Canada the ability to focus on the skills and talents that the country needs today. Legislation will be needed to establish the new Federal Job Bank system and could take up to two years to implement.
Canada has a growing demand for skilled workers, particularly in Western Canada’s booming resources sector. Canadian Business this month revealed the 50 best-paying highest-demand career choices today. They surveyed hundreds of occupations tracked by Statistics Canada and placed Petroleum Engineer as the number one job to seek, or indeed keep. This is both the fastest-growing occupation in Canada, with employment increasing by 85% between 2006 and 2011, and the second-highest in pay. Oil is Canada’s largest driver of employment and economic activity and the Canadian Business list also ranks other oil-related jobs highly such as chemical and civil engineers and environmental and occupational safety inspectors. Construction is another sector crying out for skilled workers.
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Immigration Minister Jason Kenney makes welcome changes to refugee bill


It’s rare and refreshing to see a member of Stephen Harper’s cabinet offer to amend a punitive piece of legislation.
“We have listened to parliamentarians on Bill C-31 (which overhauls Canada’s refugee system) and as a result we have a stronger bill,” Immigration Minister Jason Kenney told fellow MPs. “The government is open to reasonable suggestions.”
The changes he is proposing won’t satisfy refugee advocates, human rights activists or the opposition parties. But they would alleviate one of the harshest provisions of the legislation.
The original version of the bill, tabled in February, said asylum seekers who are part of “mass arrivals” would face mandatory detention for 12 months with no review. The amended version would require an initial review within 14 days, a second review six months later.
This is a big improvement, even if its principal purpose is to reduce the government’s exposure to lawsuits. (Several groups were planning constitutional challenges alleging that Kenney violated the Charter of Rights, which guarantees everyone “the right not to be arbitrarily detained or imprisoned.”) It would curtail the government’s power to detain refugee claimants who pose no security threat.
The minister also promised to tighten up the bill’s wording to make clear that refugees accepted years ago would not be retroactively deported to their homelands if conditions there improved. Kenney said this was never his intention, but his bill did leave open the possibility.
The minister’s third adjustment was unfair, but transitory. The government would bar failed refugee claimants from applying for humanitarian consideration for 12 months, effective the day the bill is passed. This would deprive those in the system of the time they’d built up.
The most disappointing aspect of Kenney’s pullback was how limited it was. He did not change the measure that would prevent successful refugee claims who were part of a “mass arrival” from bringing over their children for five years. He did not define mass arrival (although the bill was prompted by the landing of two boatloads of Tamil asylum seekers in 2009 and 2010). And he did not provide any clarity on how the government will designate “safe countries” to which asylum seekers can be sent back promptly with no right of appeal.
On balance, Kenney’s concessions will make the refugee bill better. But his openness, if it persists, could make the entire immigration system better.

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