Americans Mull Moving To Canada Following Obama Election, Search Engine Traffic Finds


BY Eleazar David Meléndez | November 09 2012 9:48 PM
Move to Canada, eh? Conservative Americans are thinking about it.
More Americans researched how to “move to Canada” after the re-election of U.S. President Barack Obama on Tuesday than at any other time since President George W. Bush won a second White House term in 2004.
The sudden spike in search-engine traffic for the phrase -- and the related phrase “moving to Canada” -- is evident in the accompanying graphic, which shows interest in the topic as measured by the search engine Google. The spike has been driven by Web users in more or less conservative states such as Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, and Texas, as well as in liberal urban outposts in California and Illinois.
Saying they will “move to Canada” whenever their preferred presidential candidate does not win an election is stereotypical hyperbole voiced by liberal Democrats around election time -- the implication being that Canada hosts a more egalitarian society and hence is a more desirable place to live.
But it appears distraught conservative Republicans are the ones who have been primarily fueling the emigre conversations this time.
Addressing the topic in a blog post for the libertarian Reason.com, managing editor J.D. Tuccille wrote: "Assuming that the disappointed righties are of the sort that care more about economic freedom [as evidenced by comparatively low tax rates and relatively little regulation] than banning abortions, Canada actually looks like a pretty promising destination."
Reason.com wasn’t the only conservative outlet entertaining fantasies of leaving the States behind. AsPolitico reported, a Fox23 traffic reporter in Tulsa, Okla., on Wednesday delivered a deadpan set of directions on how to make the trip from Tulsa to Winnipeg, telling viewers -- and colleagues laughing in the newsroom -- “This is serious stuff.”
The only thing American border-hoppers might find not so promising: Canadian immigration rules, which have become considerably tighter in recent years.
“Don’t just assume you will be able to cross the border because you don’t like it in the U.S. anymore,” Henry Chang, an immigration attorney with Blaney McMurtry in Toronto, told Forbes before the election.
Of course, most people searching for the next flight to Quebec won’t get that far. Lawyer David Cohen, a partner at Campbell Cohen in Montreal who has specialized in immigration law for more than 30 years, told CNN that only three or four people he has consulted had made good on the threat to move to Canada for political reasons.
Admitting as much in his Reason.com blog post, Tuccille wrote, “[I]t's unlikely that conservatives will head to the Great White North in any substantial numbers. But it's worth knowing that Canada, far from being some two-dimensional pinko version of government-subsidized paradise, has more economic freedom than the nasty, uber-capitalist United States, in many ways.”

Immigration: Ontario seeks more power to pick skilled and moneyed newcomers


Nicholas Keung
Immigration Reporter 
Ontario wants more control of immigrant selection in its attempt to wrestle with declining immigration, newcomers’ poor job prospects and unmet labour market needs.
In unveiling the province’s new immigration strategy Monday, Immigration Minister Charles Sousa said Ontario must attract a better-skilled workforce by raising the ratio of economic migrants and expanding the federally imposed quota of “provincial nominees” — immigrants the province has a role in choosing — five-fold, to 5,000 a year by 2014.
“This is a bold new direction for immigration in Ontario. It sets a path so we can attract highly skilled immigrants and investors that we need to fuel economic growth and help build stronger communities,” said Sousa, who will discuss the plan with federal Immigration Minister Jason Kenney at a meeting in mid-November.
Ontario has seen its share of immigrants to Canada drop by one-third, from 148,640 in 2001 to 99,000 in 2011. In other provinces, seven out of 10 immigrants settling in other provinces belong to the “economic” class — skilled workers and investors, as opposed to refugees and people reuniting with family members. But “economic” immigrants account for only 52 per cent of newcomers to Ontario.
With a growing knowledge-based economy and decimation of manufacturing jobs, Ontario’s newcomers earned 23.2 per cent less than their Canadian counterparts in 2011 and had a jobless rate of 15.7 per cent.
Yet, Ontario is expected to face a shortage of 364,000 skilled workers by 2025.
Sousa said Ottawa is partially responsible for Ontario’s immigration woes because of the restrictions it has placed on the federal skilled worker program, the main source of the province’s newcomers.
Calling the action plan “critical” to Ontario’s future, Ontario Chamber of Commerce president and CEO Allan O’Dette said he hoped it would reverse the province’s immigration decline and help address its skills gaps.
Kenney declined to comment on the plan. But critics said they were glad to see Queen’s Park “standing up against the Conservative government” for shortchanging Ontario.

Canadian Newcomer Financing: How does one turn a fistful of dollars into a fortune?

English: B.D.C. (Business Development Bank of ...
English: B.D.C. (Business Development Bank of Canada) Building, downtown Hamilton (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Tracy Nesdoly
On one hand there’s the tale of an immigrant neurosurgeon now driving a cab, on the other is the Canadian newcomer who turned a handful of cash and a truck-load of initiative into a business empire.

So how does one turn a fistful of dollars into a fortune? And what help is there for entrepreneurial immigrants with a business idea, and no financing?

There are a slew of organizations offering mentoring and other services to small businesses and startups, including several founded by new Canadians.

Financing, though, is harder to come by.

“It’s hard to start a business as a newcomer.” says Alejandro Monsivais, who came to Canada from Mexico a decade ago and started his food and catering company, Mexicatessen, in 2008. “But I’m not complaining, this is a safe and secure place for business.”

Unable to get a bank loan, he found micro-financing through ACCESS, a community program that offers help to those with good ideas and a willingness to take business training.

But money isn’t easy to come by for most newcomers, says Patricia Rimok, president of ib2ib Immigration Business Network, an organization that helps immigrants find financing and other support.

“There are virtually no systemic or direct support services for business immigrants, and we wanted to fill that gap,” she says.

The lack of financing or access to capital assets is identified as the main barrier to starting a business for new Canadians, according to a December 2011 a study conducted by Maytree, a foundation that offers programs and grants to reduce poverty, and the Metcalf Foundation, which works to end scarcity and build communities.

Newcomers do have some options, but some of them come with a catch.

The Business Development Bank of Canada

The BDC offers financing, venture capital and consulting. It was created to help small and medium sized business in Canada, and while not specifically aimed at immigrants, it does offer support and financing options for aboriginal, female and young entrepreneurs.

The CYBF Newcomer Entrepreneur Program

This was created in 2011 by the Business Development Bank of Canada and the Canadian Youth Business Foundation, a national charitable organization aimed at young people. Under the program, permanent Canadian residents can receive up to $15,000 on the strength of a business idea. The catch? The program is limited to those between the ages of 18 and 34. Applicants must also have lived in Canada fewer than 36 months and be fluent in French or English.

Canada Small Business Financing Program


According to the Maytree and Metcalf report, financing support is available to immigrants via standard bank loans under this program. However, the document also warns that the program has been criticized for having a cumbersome approval process.

The Ontario Self Employment Benefit

This 42-week program, aimed at the general public, offers a business start-up training program with both workshops and one-on-one coaching, and stipend of about $400 a week, some of which must be reinvested in a new business venture. While immigrants are not explicitly excluded, eligibility requirements automatically eliminate many people, including former business owners and newcomers without a work history in Canada.

Micro loans

The ACCESS Community Capital Fund offers micro-loans to those without collateral or credit history who show a commitment to succeed — demonstrated through participation in a business training course, for example — and a strong business plan. The FirstOntario Micro Loan Program, in Hamilton, is a partnership between FirstOntario the Immigrant Women’s Centre, Today’s Family, and the Welcome Inn Community Centre. Applicants must complete a business education program and receive a letter of recommendation from a community partner to be eligible for a loan, starting at $500. If the first loan is repaid, entrepreneurs can then apply for up to $2,500.

So, while finding financing is never easy, it also isn’t impossible. And being an immigrant isn’t necessarily a disadvantage.

“Canada is under-capitalized as a country,” says Ray Cao, who was born in Shanghai but raised in Canada. He has helped start two technology-based companies, which he has both self-funded and financed through venture capital.

“The ability to find financing can depend on the kind of business, then it’s about having a great idea, a great team and great traction,” he says. “That’s the most critical aspect, not where you come from.”

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Why immigration limits hurt Canada’s mid-sized cities

VANCOUVER, CANADA - MAY 28:  Vancouver Whiteca...
VANCOUVER, CANADA - MAY 28: Vancouver Whitecaps fans look on during the MLS game between the Vancouver Whitecaps FC and the New York Red Bulls May 28, 2011 in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. Vancouver and New York tied 1-1. (Image credit: Getty Images via @daylife)

The Globe and Mail

Immigration Minister Jason Kenney recently tweeted the following: “In 2013 we’ll keep immigration levels at ~250,000. The NDP says we should increase immigration by 40 per cent to at least 350,000.What do you think?” He went on to further tweet that 90 per cent of Canadians oppose higher immigration levels.

I wonder if those 90 per cent of Canadians understand just how important immigrants are to population growth across Canada – particularly in the country’s growing mid-sized urban centres?
Historically, the vast majority of immigration into Canada has clustered in the Toronto, Vancouver and Montreal Census Metropolitan Areas (CMAs) as well as some of the smaller urban centres surrounding Toronto and Vancouver.
In recent years, however, there has been a substantial increase in the annual immigrant levels in mid-sized urban centres that historically relied on inter-provincial migration and natural increases for most of their population gains.
Statistics Canada data estimating the components of annual population growth shows the relative share of immigrant population has been shifting away from Toronto and Vancouver. Between 2002 and 2006, the Toronto CMA attracted 206 immigrants per year for every 10,000 in the overall population. From 2007 to 2011, the average annual immigrant level (per 10,000 population) dropped by 19 per cent to 159 per 10,000. The Vancouver CMA witnessed a 16 per cent decline.
Toronto and Vancouver still attract the most immigrants – by a fairly wide margin – but their share of the total is waning.
Contrast this trend with some of Canada’s fast growing mid-sized urban centres. The Moncton CMA only attracted 8.8 immigrants per 10,000 population on average between 1997 and 2001. Between 2007 and 2011, the average annual number of immigrants had increased to 37.5 per 10,000 population – a 324 per cent increase compared to the 2002-2006 timeframe. As a reward for this boost in foreign-born population, Mr. Kenny closed the local Citizenship and Immigration Canada office in Moncton.
It’s not just Moncton. Using the same time frames for comparison, Saskatoon has witnessed an average annual immigrant per 10,000 population growth rate of 188 per cent. Regina is up 206 per cent. Saint John immigration is up 165 per cent. Trois-Rivières’ relative share of immigrants is also up strongly. While not CMAs, Charlottetown and Fredericton have among the fastest growing immigrant populations in Canada.
During the 2010/2011 year the immigrant population in Canada’s CMAs alone was estimated to have increased by nearly 240,000.
I am told that the Ontario government wants to revert back to the immigration levels it saw back in the early to mid-2000s to boost both its economy and population. The CMAs of Toronto, Kitchener-Cambridge-Waterloo, Windsor, Ottawa-Gatineau, Hamilton, Guelph, Kingston, St. Catharines-Niagara, Oshawa, Brantford and Peterborough all witnessed relative declines in their share of new immigrants to Canada in recent years. If Ontario increases its share of newcomers, the rest of the country’s urban centres will suffer.
If the federal government sticks to its guns and holds down immigration levels, the losers could very well be Canada’s mid-sized urban centres – the very communities that have been increasingly relying on immigration to foster population growth and supply labour markets.
One reasons why Mr. Kenny is retrenching on immigration levels is to force chronic users of Employment Insurance back into the year round labour market. But this is a risky gambit. Immigrants are being attracted to cities such as Moncton and Regina because of job opportunities that are not being filled – for whatever reason – by the local population. In addition, most of the chronic use of EI is in rural regions and not the growing urban centres.
While it is appropriate for government and industry to work together to address the skills gaps in the work force, choking off immigration with the expectation that those jobs will be filled by current residents could end up causing more harm than good. There is already some anecdotal evidence in New Brunswick that businesses are losing immigrant workers because of the EI reforms.
Mr. Kenny wants to cap immigration at 250,000 per year. I’m not sure he can achieve that level, keep Ontario happy and assure a steady supply of new immigrants to Canada’s fast growing mid-sized urban centres.
If his immigration cap stifles population growth, the 90 per cent may well end up regretting their position.

David Campbell is the president of Jupia Consultants Inc., an economic development consulting firm based in Moncton, N.B. He is a research fellow with the Canadian Institute for Research on Public Policy and Public Administration at the Université de MonctonHe also authors a daily blog on economic issues in Atlantic Canada, which can be found atwww.davidwcampbell.com.


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Open Letter to Canadian Colleges/Universities and Educational Institutions who use International Recruiters to bring Students to Canada

English: Passport Stamp issued by Immigration ...
English: Passport Stamp issued by Immigration Canada at Toronto Lester B. Pearson Airport. Category:Passport stamps of Canada (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
We are asking Canadian educational institutions to protect international students by encouraging their recruiters to operate within Canadian laws.

As the official body that oversees the regulation of immigration consultants for any immigration matter to Canada, we would encourage all Canadian institutions to be cautious of the type of practices their agents are engaged in.

It has come to our attention that foreign students are often victim of abuse and improper advice. Either they are being coerced into purchasing airline tickets at a higher fee, or they are threatened and intimidated by agents, especially when the students ask for a refund when applications are refused.

At the same time, some schools refuse to accept new students from Authorized Representatives, referring them to Educational Agents who do not follow Canadian law when it comes to providing immigration advice and services. It does not matter whether they are paid for this advice by the student, because they are compensated by the schools for their work, and are covered under the Act and Regulations.

We would like to raise awareness about this issue in light of new Canadian immigration laws that prohibit such kind of activity from unauthorized representatives. According to Immigration Processing Manuals from CIC (IP 9 Section 5.4 “Other Stakeholders”)

Educational agents abroad 

Educational agents, who are often engaged by Canadian educational institutions to assist their foreign students, typically charge a fee for their services up to and including sending a signed study permit application to the Canadian embassy. 


Under the Regulations, such agents must be authorized representatives if they provide immigration advice or representation to their clients, even if these activities occur prior to the submission of the application.

Similarly, agents who wish to represent students on immigration matters after their student applications have been submitted need to be authorized representatives.


ICCRC's mandate is to fairly and effectively regulate immigration consultants with accountability and transparency, to protect the public interest, to maintain a public list of registered/regulated consultants and to administer a stringent complaint and discipline process to crack down on unauthorized providers of immigration services.

For Further Information Please Contact: info@iccrc-crcic.ca
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