:
Thanks very much, Mr. Chairman and colleagues. It's great to be back.
I'm joined today by our new deputy Neil Yeates, our director of operations Claudette Deschênes, our ADM for policy Les Linklater, and Mark Watters, our chief financial officer, who will answer any difficult questions about the estimates.
I am pleased today to place before the committee my department's supplementary estimates (B) for fiscal year 2009-2010. These estimates include new funding requests of $127.1 million to increase departmental spending authorities to $1.56 billion for the 2009-2010 fiscal year.
This funding involves several key areas. First, we request funding of $90 million to reinstate in this year funding related to the Canada-Ontario immigration agreement, which was initially re-profiled in the 2009-2010 main estimates. This is funding related to contributions to settlement organizations, principally in Ontario.
Secondly, we request funding of $32.5 million in 2009-2010 to support the imposition of a visa requirement for Mexican citizens.
[Translation]
The increase in refugee claims and the immigration violation rate for Mexico have resulted in significant costs for the refugee determination system. This funding is to establish a new permanent infrastructure for temporary resident visa processing for visitors, temporary workers and students.
[English]
Third, we request $3.5 million in 2009-2010 to significantly reduce citizenship proof inventories and processing times. These investments should allow CIC to respond to concerns by clients and other government departments through a reduction in processing times.
[Translation]
I propose to continue my remarks by addressing some matters concerning citizenship and immigration that might be of particular interest to the committee.
[English]
Let me first address the November 3 report of the Auditor General. I wish to thank her for her review.
We agree with her on the importance of a modern, efficient, and well-run immigration program and we are considering her recommendations very carefully. I am pleased to say that we have already begun making key improvements, and my officials have developed a plan to address the areas of concern identified by the Auditor General.
[Translation]
She has pointed out some administrative matters regarding temporary foreign workers—matters that we had already started to address through new regulations I introduced in October.
[English]
To guard against the abuse of foreign workers, our government has proposed regulations that allow for greater cooperation between my department and Human Resources and Skills Development Canada, as well as with the labour ministries in the provinces and territories who actually oversee and enforce labour market standards.
[Translation]
These changes will help us recognize bad employers and provide better oversight to minimize the chance of exploitation and abuse of foreign workers. Many employers tell me that they would go out of business if they could not find foreign workers, which is why we need the kind of tools and regulations that we are developing to protect workers and support our economy.
[English]
Our immigration program is constantly evolving to respond to Canada's changing economic goals. As the committee is aware, the ministerial instructions as part of our action plan for faster immigration are a key tool in that respect. I would like to note that the government is addressing the AG's questions regarding the quality of analysis used to develop the ministerial Instructions. They were developed after extensive consultations with both public and private stakeholders, including provinces and territories.
[Translation]
Second, the department is taking the necessary steps to ensure that the instructions remain as up-to-date as possible. We are doing so by monitoring labour market trends, gathering information on changing national and regional employment needs, and we are closely monitoring the flow of new applications.
[English]
Mr. Chairman, the reforms our government has introduced have resulted in new applications in the federal skilled worker category being processed in six to twelve months, and a reduction of over 30% in the backlog of federal skilled worker applications received prior to the reforms. These are major improvements. Going from five years on average to less than a year puts us back in the game and competing for the world's best and brightest.
This is a substantial improvement, and the world is taking notice. To quote the CEO of Microsoft:
The Canadian government is more welcoming of getting the best and the brightest from around the world than the U.S. government.
As the committee is probably aware, last month I introduced some significant changes to how newcomers can become Canadian citizens. I'd like to take a few minutes to talk about them.
I'm committed to ensuring that new Canadians understand the values, democratic institutions, and history that have made Canada one of the greatest countries in the world in which to live.
[Translation]
That is why I was enormously proud three weeks ago to introduce a new study guide for those who wish to become new Canadian citizens.
[English]
This new guide, entitled Discover Canada: The Rights and Responsibilities of Citizenship, is more reflective of Canada's diversity, history, and values than the previous edition. It aims to make Canadian citizenship more meaningful by providing information that all Canadians should know and be proud of.
[Translation]
For example, we recognize the history of New France—which goes back over four centuries in Quebec—and acknowledge the collaboration of French and aboriginal people.
[English]
We highlight the contribution of Canadians of Chinese origin to building the country, acknowledging the injustice of the Chinese head tax, and we note the government's apology for the same.
We talk about the waves of refugees who came to Canada seeking our protection, such as the Hungarians in 1956 and the Vietnamese in the 1970s, who fled communist oppression.
We recognize Canada's leadership in fighting slavery, the movement of the black Loyalists to Canada, and the contribution of abolitionists like Mary Ann Shadd.
We also highlight a broad spectrum of successful Canadians, including Olympic swimmer and athlete Mark Tewksbury.
Finally, I did not feel that the previous guide acknowledged that every year this country celebrates the contribution of over a million Canadians who served in our uniform in the past century and the more than 110,000 who made the ultimate sacrifice to defend our freedoms. This needed to change.
Compared to the previous edition, Discover Canada aims to underscore the diversity of Canada and our traditions of pluralism, unity, and diversity. It emphasizes that new citizens inherit both rights and responsibilities, something that I think was insufficiently emphasized in the previous guide.
[Translation]
It also emphasizes the importance for newcomers to Canada to integrate into our society and to learn one of our two official languages.
Many newcomers, Mr. Chairman, have told me that they found the outgoing book somewhat insulting—that it underestimated their interest to learn about this country.
I am confident the new guide will help them to adapt more quickly and take advantage of the economic, social and cultural opportunities that Canada has to offer.
[English]
Before I conclude, Mr. Chair, I hope the committee members saw our announcement yesterday, which I made with my colleague , Minister of HRSDC. It was the fruit of a lot of hard work, launched with the agreement that the Prime Minister arrived at with the provinces and territories in January of this year, to create a pan-Canadian framework for the recognition of foreign credentials.
We made the announcement on the way forward as a result of a $50 million investment in the economic action plan that will provide an agreement right across the country for common standards and a transparent pathway to credential recognition. We can't do that all at once for all 40-plus licensed professions; we have to engage those who are prepared to work with us. The initial list is eight professions from coast to coast. Next year we hope to roll it out to another six, and I believe and hope it will pick up momentum.
In those professions we are now getting a guarantee from the provinces who will be working with the professional agencies that people who apply will be getting an answer within a year, rather than two years of evaluation and another two years of testing. In many professions I think we will be going from a four-year processing time to less than a year. It's not perfect. We cannot and never will guarantee anyone will get a yes answer. But finally I think we see strong cooperation between the federal, provincial, and territorial governments to get some meaningful progress on the vexatious problem of credential recognition.
Thank you for your time, Chairman. I look forward to the questions.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman.
Minister, thank you for your comments.
I'd also like to welcome the officials from the department. We appreciate, obviously, your work as public servants on this very important issue of immigration and citizenship.
Minister, I read your comments, and every time I read--and I recognize these words, by the way--that people “reprofile funding”, I wonder what that means. Essentially, it's a polite name for money that actually wasn't used or was cut, and that, of course, is related to your fourth sentence, about the Canada-Ontario immigration agreement.
One of the concerns I have vis-à-vis the whole issue of immigration as it relates to immigrant settlement as well as language training is the amount of funding that actually lapsed. I think we all recognize in this committee that one of the major barriers for the integration of immigrants into Canadian society is in fact language. There are $81 million lapsed in that area, and $11 million, I believe, in the area related to settlement aid. I'd like an explanation for that, number one.
Number two, Minister, if I may, this is not necessarily related to the estimates per se, but it is an issue that you and I have shared concerns over, and that is the refugee reform package that was promised a while ago. We still have not seen the package. We would like to give that particular issue the respect it deserves when you have a staggering 62,000 backlog of refugee claims and a system that I think everyone in this room agrees is broken.
I wonder what the story behind that is. Have you presented a package to cabinet? Do you have the support of the Prime Minister and the Minister of Finance for the funding required? If yes, then when would you expect the package, and if no, then let's be honest with the Canadian people and say that's just not part of the agenda.
:
Thank you for those questions, substantive as always, Mr. Bevilacqua.
First, with respect to lapsed funds, I think we need to understand the magnitude of the increase in funding for settlement that came about in 2006 between COIA , the Canada-Ontario immigration agreement, and subsequently the changes in budget 2006. We effectively about tripled the federal investment through my ministry in settlement services in provinces other than Quebec. Quebec goes up on an automatic escalator, but the other provinces are now finally in rough parity with Quebec in terms of per immigrant or per capita settlement funding.
This involved effectively tripling funding in one year, starting in 2006. When you do something like that, you need to make sure the money is being spent responsibly. Officials will tell you they worked very hard with the settlement sector—the settlement agencies in Ontario in particular, where we have most immigrants—to ensure those funds are responsibly invested.
Earlier this year it appeared we were going to lapse $90 million in the Ontario portion of settlement funding simply because we couldn't find enough projects to fund that match the terms and conditions in Treasury Board guidelines. I signalled to officials that we wanted to respect the spirit and the letter of COIA, and they worked very hard. I'd like to commend our officials for working very hard with the settlement sector to find ways to get these services out the door in ways that complied with the accounting rules of the government.
Initially we were going to take $90 million for this year and reprofile it into next year. We were not going to take it away but just keep it on the table, so it did not lapse in the budget year, and move it forward to next fiscal year. Because of the good work of our officials, we were able to invest those funds this year that will go into language training and other relevant programs this year. We're developing a system to make sure that goes forward without these blips in the future in terms of funding.
Second, on refugee reform, I appreciate the very thoughtful approach you've taken on that. I think everyone recognizes that we need to make improvements to the system, and I can tell you—Mr. Chair, I'm obviously not in any capacity to violate cabinet confidentialities or to discuss what may or may not be before cabinet—that as the Prime Minister indicated in September of this year, Canada and Parliament need to address this issue. I'm confident that both Parliament and government will be doing so in the fairly near future. I won't put a timeframe on that, but our officials have been working very hard on this issue. It's a very complicated piece.
Any kind of meaningful reform to the refugee system would involve statutory amendments, regulatory amendments, operational changes, with CIC, with CBSA, and the IRB, etc. It's a complex area in which some very sound ideas are coming up about a balanced system that obviously respects our legal and humanitarian obligations while creating a more efficient system, providing faster protection of the real refugees while disincentivizing abuse of the system.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Thank you for being here today, minister.
I would like to continue on the question of the use of French at the Immigration and Refugee Board. We've been talking about that for a long time, you and I, and I am still as concerned about what is going on.
We are observing that, increasingly, newcomer files are systematically being opened in English by default. In fact, that has become the rule in Montreal. There are cases in which, even if the newcomer is neither francophone nor anglophone, the file is still opened in English. There are cases in which, if the newcomer is a francophile, or at least someone who has an affinity with the French language, the file is opened in English. Consequently, later on, when the matter goes before the immigration tribunals, the evidence is filed in English, government representatives want to proceed in English, and it is very difficult to get permission to proceed in French.
There was the specific case of Mr. Handfield, who asked, on behalf of his client, to be able to proceed in French in his case. The tribunal ultimately agreed, but refused to order the evidence to be translated. At the time, I questioned you about this matter, and you answered that the tribunal had made a decision and that, as minister, you could not interfere in the matter.
This matter of the use of French at the IRB is now before the Federal Court. In that case, the respondent party was the Minister of Citizenship and Immigration. I have before me the brief filed by the Deputy Attorney General of Canada, which clearly states that he is acting on behalf of the Minister of Citizenship and Immigration. He sets out the points he is addressing, that is the claim of counsel and his client that the latter has a right to a trial in French, which, it seems obvious to me, presupposes that documents can be produced in French.
When I asked you the question in the House, you answered me that the applicant in question had first asked to proceed in English, which was inaccurate to say the least, not to say false. The briefs submitted by counsel representing you contain excerpts from the proceeding, and at no point did anyone say they wanted to proceed in English. At most, the board member asked him if he spoke English.
Minister, you know from having spoken personally with me that I speak French. That does not mean that I would agree to proceed in English before a tribunal. Those are two different things.
In view of all these arguments, why is your department engaged in this legal guerilla warfare to avoid proceeding in English from the outset and translating the documents?
:
Welcome to the committee again, Minister.
The Auditor General last week said that the department has no strategic plan, no vision, made decisions without considering their cost, risk, potential impact on other programs, and delivery impact. So we have 192,519 temporary foreign workers in Canada. We have fewer families coming in, according to your 2010 targets. We have far fewer, half of the refugees, that are going to be accepted in Canada.
Since 2002, because the former Liberal government changed the point system, people who have low skills or manual labour, including the live-in caregivers, cannot come into Canada as permanent residents through the federal program. So they're coming in. We need low-skilled workers, there's no doubt about that, StatsCan tells you that, yet they cannot come in as permanent residents. How are they coming in? They're coming in as temporary foreign workers. So how many foreign workers do you expect to come in this coming year, 2010?
Let me read you one line that the Auditor General said:
Until it develops a strategic roadmap for the future and it evaluates the performance of its current programs, CIC will not be in a position to demonstrate that its programming best meets the needs of the Canadian labour market.
To make it even worse, she said there's no quality assurance framework to obtain assurance that decisions made by its visa officers are fair and consistent. So there's no plan, and the assurance framework is not there.
Then the third piece are these unscrupulous consultants out there telling people how to lie. It's a small number of them, but they're criminals, basically, and they are abusing the system, yet the victims are the ones who get punished. They lose their money, get deported, or never make it here, or the families never arrive in Canada because of these unscrupulous consultants.
We had a concurrence motion last week where Parliament said “act, please act”. We are sick and tired of these unscrupulous consultants—not all of them, but some of them. And right now there are no regulations. They basically do whatever they can. They can set up shop and—CIC is not working, we know that.
You talked about taking action on this front. When are you going to crack down on these criminals, some, a few? We don't even know where they are. So when are you going to take action?
What is the plan for this coming year, 2010? Are you going to balance the needs of the labour market and also Canada needing permanent residents? We need their kids here, not just their labour. Your October changes deal with some of the abuse, but it does not deal with the core problem of the entire program. In fact, it makes it worse, because you're letting them work four years and then you say to them that they cannot come back for six years. You should do that to the employers rather than the workers. So this is now reversed, and that means the temporary foreign workers have even less power.
:
This is a problem that has long vexed all governments. It is frustrating to newcomers that the federal government is principally responsible for selecting economic immigrants through the federal skilled worker program, which is based largely on education, skills, and experience. Yet, when they arrive here, the 20% of economic immigrants who fall within regulated professions often find themselves unable to get clear answers on their applications for credential recognition from one of the over 440 licensing bodies that exist in the ten provinces. The resulting chronic underemployment has led to the tragic joke about our having the best-educated cab drivers in the world.
I agree completely with Ms. Chow, Mr. Bevilacqua, and others who have raised this concern. We don't want to be bringing skilled people, who are often from the top economic tier of their countries of origin, to chronic underemployment in Canada. It's bad for them. It's a waste of talent. It's an opportunity cost for us. That's why in 2006 we created the Foreign Credentials Referral Office, with a $32 million budget. We wanted to invest in helping people begin the process of accreditation before they arrive in Canada. This was done to cut down on the time between arrival and accreditation. We are doing this through the Canadian immigration integration project, which will shortly be expanded and rolled out in additional missions. We're doing this through our innovation fund—providing these services in Korea, Taiwan, China, the Philippines, and India. We are giving people an opportunity now, either through the Internet or through those offices, to begin to make their applications and to understand how to get their credentials recognized.
More important, in January the prime minister, for the first time, exercised federal political leadership on this vexatious issue. He said to the ten premiers that this was something we had to get right, that we were letting down too many newcomers, and that we needed a pan-Canadian, national approach. Remarkably—I never thought I'd see the day—he got all ten premiers and the three territorial leaders to sign off on an accord. This accord will create an open labour market in Canada by 2014, where there will be mutual recognition of international credentials, and cause a framework to be developed that will accelerate credential recognition for foreign-trained professionals.
That's what we announced yesterday. It was the consequence of a $50-million investment in the economic action plan. We announced that we've identified with the ten provinces eight professional licensing agencies across the country, licensing bodies that include engineers and pharmacists, among others. By the time the system starts, people applying for recognition from one of these professional bodies will get an answer within a year.
Welcome, Minister, and to your senior staff as well. Thank you for being here today.
Minister, I want to thank you, first of all, for what you've done with regard to increasing the settlement funding.
The Halton Multicultural Council in Oakville does a fantastic job of serving new Canadians in a whole range of areas. It's actually been able to expand its space. It's serving people, I think, in about 30 different languages. It does language training and computer training, and it is invaluable in helping people find new jobs. So it's making a huge difference in my riding. I'd like to invite you, on the record, to visit Oakville if you can, some time, and visit that site to see what's going on.
The other thing is I want to congratulate you for yesterday's announcement. This problem of foreign credential recognition is one that all of us in public life have seen, because it has been around for literally decades, so that foreign professionals come here and can't find a job in their area of expertise and end up driving cabs, etc. So this is a huge step forward, and I want to thank you for that as well.
My question is with regard to refugees. As of yesterday, I understand, the Immigration and Refugee Board is filled to 98% capacity, which is effectively 100%. You're always going to have some turnover. Can you tell us about the new process of selecting and filling the board's seats with qualified individuals?
:
That's okay, Mr. Chair.
Minister, thanks again to you and your officials for being back before us.
I want to echo what Mr. Young said about foreign credentials recognition. I represent part of the most ethnically diverse town in all of Canada--Markham--and foreign credential recognition is an enormous issue. It's something that I've been listening to governments talk about for a long time--even in my time as an assistant in the provincial government. Finally we're seeing some light at the end of the tunnel, so congratulations.
I've had so many requests in my office for copies of the new citizenship guide. I don't know how I'll ever keep up with all the requests and all of the links we've been sending out. It's a huge success.
On the temporary foreign workers program, my riding has an urban component as well as a very important rural component. I talk to my farmers all the time and they tell me the same thing. They don't know how they would ever get their crops in the ground and back out if it wasn't for the temporary foreign workers program. I'm blessed to see the workers in the fields throughout much of the summer--so extraordinary work there.
In her report, the Auditor General said that one of the big factors in the growth of the backlog was the change in the act in 2000. She said it was a key factor in the growth of the inventory. In 2003 there was a reduction in the target levels for foreign skilled workers, and that was another key factor. There are obviously some lessons to be learned there in how new legislative changes can have a huge impact on hundreds of thousands of people.
Further on in her report she singled out some of the work that had been done on the Canadian experience class. She said it was a good example of how programming decisions should be supported.
Obviously some planning will go into any future changes, but what are some direct things that are being done to ensure that we start seeing an even greater reduction in the backlog? I know we're going in the right direction, but perhaps you can comment on some specific things we're doing to address the backlog.
As I've said to this committee before, the single biggest challenge that our ministry faces is managing what we call the various inventories, the backlogs. When our government came to office in 2006, the overall immigration backlog was pushing up to one million cases.
Let me say first of all that in the main stream of economic immigration--the federal skilled worker program--we've made enormous progress. The backlog had peaked at 640,000 cases, I believe. Had we not taken action through the action plan for faster immigration involving the ministerial instructions and related operational changes, we would have seen that backlog for federal skilled workers grow to over 800,000 cases by now. On processing times, the five-plus years edging up to over six-plus years was unacceptable. The system was on the brink of collapsing under its own weight. Something had to be done and was done through amendments to IRPA and operational changes, in addition to a $109-million incremental investment in budget 2008.
Thanks to those measures we have seen the backlog in the federal skilled worker program processing reduced by 32%, which is the latest figure I have. People who are making applications--as of February 2008--are now getting answers within a year. I have to say that when I speak to immigration practitioners, lawyers, and people who follow this closely, they are delighted with the program and how it's working.
The Auditor General has pointed to certain challenges, and we take her comments very seriously. She appeared to make her comments or projections based on the assumption that we will maintain the 38 categories indefinitely into the future. In point of fact, we've always indicated that we will adjust the ministerial instructions for the occupational categories as necessary. If that means we'll need to refine the categories following consultation with the provinces and other stakeholders, we will certainly do so. In fact it's our intention to refine the ministerial instructions. That will help us maintain the progress we've made on backlog reduction for the skilled worker category.
:
When we came to office in 2006, the provinces outside of Quebec were massively underfunded in terms of settlement services, including language training. One of the first things we did in the 2006 budget was to effectively triple federal funding for settlement services to help ensure successful integration of newcomers. We did this through the Canada-Ontario immigration agreement, specifically for contribution agreements with settlement agencies in Ontario, and through transfers to the provinces of B.C. and Manitoba, with which we have devolution agreements. They deliver the services on our behalf. We did it through direct federal services being provided in the four Atlantic provinces, plus Saskatchewan and Alberta. Quebec of course has its own system.
There has been a huge increase in services. You and I visited Progressive Intercultural Community Services, PICS, which provides an important range of settlement services, including language training in the lower mainland. They are doing so much more than they were a few years ago because of this.
We are ambitious for newcomers to succeed, and all the available empirical data indicates that the single most important factor in the economic success of immigrants is language proficiency. That is not to say that people with limited English or French abilities cannot succeed in Canada; we all know of great success stories where that has been the case. But increasingly we have a knowledge-based economy, where people's success will be tied in part to their language abilities. This is why we have invested so much in helping people improve their language abilities.
What concerns me is that only about 25% of eligible permanent residents enrol in the free English- and French-language classes we are providing through the settlement agencies or the provinces. That's not good enough. We are ambitious for newcomers to succeed, and we want to encourage them to make every effort.
I know it is difficult. If you are working two survival jobs and your spouse is at home taking care of kids, it's not easy to spend two hours in a language class. I understand that. That's why we're trying to find more innovative programs, like the HIPPY program, which provides at-home integration counselling and language support to at-home parents. With the pilot program we've recently launched, we will send vouchers that are worth up to 500 hours of free language classes to randomly selected newcomers in Ontario, Alberta, and Nova Scotia. That will increase their knowledge of the availability of free language training and hopefully create a positive competition for better hours, locations, and service within the settlement sector, which is the objective of the pilot program.
I'd like to welcome our colleague, Mr. McColeman, to the committee and commend him for his efforts in this regard.
The experience of the British home children was a significant part of building Canada. I believe something like 100,000 British home children arrived in this country between the 1880s and the early 1930s. While many of them had very positive experiences and had welcoming families and were able to have a future moving out of terrible poverty in Britain during that period, we also recognize that many of them experienced very difficult treatment, and in some cases abuse, and certainly we acknowledge that fact. This is what you're helping to educate Canadians about, their contribution and their important role in our history. I commend you for that.
Certainly for all parties, private members' bills and motions are free votes, but the cabinet always votes taking a government position, and I'm pleased to inform you that the cabinet has decided to support this motion, because we think it's a great way of highlighting this remarkable period in our history.
This is joined by various other educational efforts supported by federal departments and agencies. For example, I understand that Canada Post intends, on the advice of their commemorative stamp advisory committee, to issue a special British home child stamp in 2010. I understand that Pier 21, the new federal museum of immigration, has done exhibitions on their experience and will continue to, as has the Museum of Civilization across the river in Gatineau. Your motion I think will help to bring these different initiatives together at the federal level to raise awareness. Really, as you say, it corresponds to what we're trying to do in our new citizenship study guide, “Discover Canada”, which is to give people a better sense of our history.
I think Mr. Young was asking about how you get copies. We'll be getting printed copies, and I'll be letting all MPs know shortly, and asking them how many copies they want to order to distribute within their constituency offices, or wherever. If people would like to get their own copies, they can contact us online or they can download it from our website at www.cic.gc.ca.
I should point out that for several years we've had a foreign credential recognition program situated in the Ministry of Human Resources and Social Development Canada. That is the program and the ministry that has been the interface on the federal side with the licensing bodies. Minister Finley has taken the lead on this issue, working with the provinces with particular intensity since the first ministers' agreement in January of this year.
Obviously we don't have a direct oversight role with respect to the some 440 licensing bodies in Canada. They are creatures of the provincial governments, which under the Constitution, of course, have exclusive jurisdiction in their domains for labour market regulation, including for the regulated professions. It's principally the provinces that have been the interlocutors, but some of what I would call perhaps the more progressive professional agencies have gotten into a dialogue with the federal government through HRSDC and the FCR program.
We've been able to identify, of the 40-plus regulated professions, which of them are more willing to knock down some of the barriers to credential recognition for newcomers. The list of eight that we announced yesterday is a pretty good indication of the ones who are willing to play ball.
Some of the major professional agencies—let's make no bones about this—are less willing to collaborate, less willing to streamline the process, cut the red tape, and reduce the processing times. I have to share the observation that some of them appear to be acting in a way as to keep closed labour markets and to keep closed the doors of opportunity for foreign-trained professions, and that is a shame.
We are exercising political pressure, as are the provincial governments—Ontario through it's fairness commissioner, and B.C. with the recent legislation. We are putting considerable pressure on those agencies not to reduce their standards, but to streamline the process. As I keep saying, we can't guarantee a yes answer, but we should offer them a clear, transparent, and fairly brief process so they can get a yes or a no.
An example is the medical profession. Here we have a profession that is much in demand in Canada and we have foreign-trained doctors who are clearly not getting licence to practice. It's not just foreign-trained doctors. I have a constituent, born in Canada, who went down to Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in the United States, got his M.D., got his specialization, and came back to Alberta where he found that it was going to take him a couple of years to be able to practise. He went back to the United States. There are hundreds of cases like that.
So we hope that next year, in the second year of the pan-Canadian framework rollout, the relevant colleges and licensing bodies in the medical profession will come to the table and give us a streamlined process for a maximum one-year answer on applications to be licensed.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
First, on behalf of the Liberal Party, I want to express to Mr. McColeman that we will be supporting the British home child issue that you've raised.
Minister, we in this committee and I'm sure in your work as minister we're dealing with a lot of issues, whether it's foreign credentials, various streams, language training, immigrant aid, or settlement. But sometimes as we deal with these specific issues we forget the real big macro picture.
Unfortunately, what is happening with immigration in Canada, which is very different from immigration after the world war, is that you have immigrants who are over-represented in the poverty rates, the unemployment rates, and the under-employment rates of our country. This issue is important for two reasons. Number one, of course the immigrants are not fulfilling the so-called Canadian dream they talk about abroad. Number two, it's also bad for our own national interest. When individuals are not maximizing their human resources potential, it's very hard for a country to maximize its potential.
While we are dealing with immigration as a specific department, one of the concerns I have is that immigration is not a government-wide issue. That is a concern, and it's been a concern for me for a long time; it's not just a recent issue. I think it's myopic and parochial to just think of it as your ministry. Is this going to change? I understand how important the refugee reform package is to you, for example, but I'm not so sure the Minister of Finance and the Prime Minister have the same appreciation. I'm being quite frank. Nor do I particularly believe that immigration and citizenship is viewed as a top-tier file. I'm fully cognizant of the economic challenges they face, but immigration is one of the pillars of nation-building, and I don't think it gets the respect it deserves.
I also wanted to emphasize the fact that the Bloc Québécois will be supporting Mr. McColeman's motion. He will no doubt be delighted to know that one of the descendants of those persons is an illustrious promoter of Quebec sovereignty in the person of Gilles Duceppe.
I want to go back to the French question. In our previous exchange, minister, you said that the language of proceeding could not be changed at every turn during a trial, that that would require translation, which would result in costs.
However, in the case before us, at the first opportunity, even before the first hearing was held, counsel asked on behalf of his client to proceed in French. The problem is that, at the start of the process, when the respondent was summoned to meet with the official, the material had already been produced in English. A form had been completed by an official in Montreal, who had checked the “English” box systematically. However, if you say that, once the material is produced in English, it can't be translated, there will be virtually no material in French, since, unfortunately, immigration matters are dealt with in English in Montreal.
You said earlier that that was ultimately the fault of the Public Safety people. First, could you undertake to ask your Public Safety colleague if the agency could proceed in French by default? Second, if the first opportunity not yet early enough, when must the francophone lawyers in Montreal make the request in order to be entitled to proceed in French?
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
With your permission, minister, I would like to do a little follow-up to what Mr. Bevilacqua tried to discuss with regard to nation building in Canada, as well as your comments on citizenship.
You believe this concerns all Canadians, not just newcomers. I entirely agree with you. In fact, it seems to me that we often fail in our duty to provide information to our longstanding citizens. I am virtually certain that, if the vast majority of Canadians had to take the citizenship examination, the vast majority would fail it, including those who are currently in school and studying the history of Canada. I agree: it should really affect the entire population of Canada.
I would nevertheless like to note a few deficiencies. Perhaps this information can eventually be added to the guide, including mention of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. I think it is important to include it, as well as the fact that Canada was one of the major players in the establishment of the International Criminal Court, that it was also one of the major promoters of the concept of responsibility for protecting states, one of the major instigators of the anti-personnel mines treaty. I think those are among the major accomplishments that Canadians can boast of in the world and that should also be known to all Canadian citizens.
Sometimes I'm saddened to see the extent to which our citizens do not even understand how Parliament operates. They don't understand at all the difference between Parliament and the provincial parliamentary assemblies.
These are all deficiencies that I believe we should remedy in a guide for all citizens, not just newcomers to Canada.
I'd like to have your comments on that subject.