Agriculture and horticulture workers are on the list of eligible essential occupations, as well as construction workers, repair and service workers, heavy equipment operators, transport truck drivers, resource harvesters and more.
“As a result of the pandemic, attention has been placed on the ongoing need to fill certain essential occupations. By granting permanent resident status to those with experience in these occupations, Canada will be leveraging immigration … to help stabilize this workforce both for pandemic recovery and into the future,” explained the statement.
The program, however, has been the target of criticism from migrant worker advocacy groups.
“Survey results released today reveal that 45.4 per cent of migrant workers and 34.5 per cent of international graduates are excluded from the new short-term immigration program,” said a May 4 release from the Migrant Rights Network. “Out of 3,000 survey responses, an additional 48.27 per cent of international graduates and 45.4 per cent of migrant workers do not have the language test results required to apply for this first-come, first-served program.”
Program requirements, including documentation and language proficiencies, are exclusionary and place financial burden on migrant workers, the organization says.
“Prime Minister Trudeau has the opportunity of a lifetime to change the course of Canada’s economy while ensuring equal rights for all,” said Syed Hussan, the Migrant Rights Network secretariat, in the statement. “We don’t need small, one-off, exclusionary pilot programs, we need an overhaul of the immigration system so that every resident in the country has the same immigration status and therefore the same access to labour rights, healthcare, and other essential services.”
Justicia 4 Migrant Workers (J4MW), another advocacy group, says the program is particularly inadequate in addressing the needs of agricultural migrant workers.
“These reforms do nothing to address how the current point system discriminates against both undocumented communities and migrants deemed ‘low skill’ and ‘low wage.’ More troublingly, the reforms do nothing to change the indentureship of thousands of migrant workers in Canada,” an April 22 statement from J4MW said. “Migrant agricultural workers who work under a system of indentured labour will once again see no improvements to their working and living conditions as a result of the continuation of a closed work permit system that binds workers to one employer. Instead, migrant farm workers are put into competition with over 90 other occupations for a measly 30,000 spots, when over 50,000 farm workers have entered Canada on tied work permits during the pandemic alone.”
GomezDavid\E+ photo