‘We need Landed Status Now!’ Migrant Care Workers release report

CANADA – Migrant Care Workers in Toronto, Edmonton, Vancouver, Ottawa and Montreal are jointly releasing a report on Sunday, November 18, 2018 calling for immediate action to stop fears of mass deportation and ensure permanent resident status on arrival and family unity for migrant Care Workers.

Care Workers are calling for a fundamental overhaul of the program as a matter of fairness and human rights. A care strategy also ensures a healthy population in Canada and upholds the integrity of the Canadian immigration system. This historic report is developed by Care Workers themselves from the experiences of working and living under the Caregiver Program. The Caregiver Program is set to expire in November 2019.

Tens of thousands of racialized women who came to Canada with the promise of living in Canada permanently with their families are in limbo, in fear of deportation, yet still full of hope for fairness.


WHAT: Report Launch: “Care Workers Voices for Fairness and Landed Status”

WHERE, WHEN, MEDIA CONTACTS:

  • Toronto: Nov 18, 11am, Suite 203, 720 Spadina Avenue, 647-782-6633 (Caregivers Action Centre & Caregiver Connections)

  • Edmonton: Nov 18, 1pm, CUPE 474 Hall – 10989 124 Street, 780-937-5908 (Alberta Careworkers Association & Migrante Alberta)

  • Vancouver: Nov 18, 10am, BCGEU, 130-2920 Virtual Way, 604-618-3649 (Vancouver Committee for Domestic Workers and Caregivers Rights)

  • Montreal: Nov 18, 10am, 4755 Van Horne, Bureau 110, 514-238-0089 (PINAY Quebec)

  • Ottawa: Nov 18, 2:30pm, 251 Bank Street, 613-255-1921 (Migrante Ottawa)

WHO: Landed Status Now Campaign, Migrant Care Workers, Legal experts and Women leaders


BACKGROUND

For over a hundred years, women workers like us have come to Canada to provide care for families, people with disabilities and the elderly. In the last 60 years, that work has been through temporary work programs. The current Caregiver Program was a pilot program created in 2014 by the previous Conservative government without consultation with Caregivers, and is incredibly flawed.

Only 1,955 Care Workers and dependents were granted permanent residency in the first 36 months under the current Caregiver program. This is in stark contrast to the average  10,740 Care Workers and their dependents received permanent resident status every year under the previous Live-In Caregiver program. If this immensely exclusionary program is allowed to lapse, all Care Workers entering Canada today will not have access to permanent residency and may have to make the difficult decision to become undocumented.

Caregiving work in the home is the backbone of Canada’s labour market and social support systems. Without care work, the economy does not work. Canada must create a national care strategy to ensure quality care for children, the elderly and people with disabilities. This is about a healthy population and human rights for all. Decent work and permanent landed status on entry for the workers providing that care labour must be the foundation.

CARE WORKER PROPOSAL

(1) Federal Care Worker Program

To replace the Caregiver “pilot project”, the government should create a new Federal Workers Program for Care Workers that provides landed status upon entry for Care Workers and our families.

Care Workers should be able to seek employment in Canada through the national job bank. Employers seeking Care Workers can use the job bank to find Care Workers employees. This would take away the need for third-party recruiters / job agencies and the thousands of dollars they charge us to get a job.

(2) Immediate reforms

Care Workers – like us – who are already in Canada and those workers that will continue to arrive until the new Federal Care Worker Program is put in place also need changes:

  • Care Workers should able to apply for Permanent Residency (PR) after 1 year of work ( or 1,950 hours): Currently we have to work 2 years while 1 year is the standard for most other permanent immigration programs in Canada;

  • All Care Workers must get open work permits and labour mobility: Care Workers currently can only work for the employer listed on our permits, which makes it extremely difficult to leave bad bosses or, in the case of elder care, when employers pass away;

  • The new educational requirements should be removed: Care Workers are required under the current pilot program to have completed 1-year of Canadian post-secondary equivalent education to apply for PR – but we are not allowed to or able to study while working;

  • The English language test prior to permanent residency should be removed: New English language requirements were introduced in the pilot program, but no free English classes exist;

  • The new caps that allow only 2,750 PR applications each year in each caregiving stream should be removed: There are over 5,500 Care Workers coming to Canada in the childcare stream each year, the discretionary caps on PR applications means that at least half of us will not be able to apply even after completing all the requirements;

  • The permanent residency backlog should be resolved: Thousands of Care Workers have been waiting for up to 10 years to reunite with their families because no one’s looking at their application;

  • Spouses and children should be allowed to join us  with open work and study permits of their own: This is the norm for many other temporary immigration programs and it results in improved health and stronger families rather than years of forced separation;

  • Remove the second medical that is required when applying for permanent residency. This change was sneaked in the pilot project and adds unnecessary financial barriers and delays; and

  • Section 38(1)(c) of the IRPA (“Medical Inadmissibility” rules) should be repealed because it denies PR to an entire family if even one member of the family has a disability.

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