Transcript Slide 1

Immigration to support
Canada’s economic needs
Presentation to the Leaders Summit on
Immigrant Employment, Vancouver
September 18, 2012
Context
• Canada is competing globally for skilled immigrants, with an uneven
distribution of anticipated shortages across regions, sectors,
occupations
• Provinces and territories are engaged in selection to meet regional needs
and distribute economic immigration benefits across Canada
• High employer interest and influence in immigration to meet labour market
needs, both permanent and temporary.
• Economic Action Plan 2012 announces the Government’s intention to
“build a fast and flexible economic immigration system whose primary
focus is on meeting Canada’s labour market needs”.
• Immigration modernization an opportunity to enhance employers’ role
in attracting global talent and in integrating newcomers.
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What we’ve heard from you….
• Concrete solutions needed to address workforce challenges, and better
alignment of policies, programs and processes with labour market
demand
• Appetite for information, resources to link to immigrants – “one-stop
shop” – but employers are diverse in needs and capacities
• Desire to capitalize on stakeholder networks such as IEC-B.C. for support
and solutions, and to share promising practices
• Governments, employers, business groups and service providers are all
facilitators – and employers have a leadership role to play , such as in
improving immigrant employment.
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Improving selection to respond to labour market needs
• Federal Skilled Worker Program – favouring skilled workers able
to integrate more rapidly and successfully into the Canadian
labour market
– Younger immigrants, better language skills, Canadian experience
– Educational credential assessment from a designated organization
– New Federal Skilled Trades Program
• Canadian Experience Class – incentives to retain talent such as
reducing work experience requirement from 24 to 12 months for
eligible temporary workers with in-demand skills.
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Improving selection to respond to labour market needs
• Working with provinces/territories to renew focus of Provincial
Nominee Program on economic immigration and to respond
quickly to regional labour market needs
• Aligning Temporary Foreign Worker Program with labour market
needs
– Ensuring that employers look first to domestic labour force
– Reducing paper burden and accelerating processes for eligible
employers
– Increasing worker protections – employer compliance reviews.
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Improving speed, flexibility and efficiency
Amendments to the Immigrant and Refugee Protection Act (IRPA)
will enable CIC to:
• Reduce the Federal Skilled Worker backlog and focus resources
on applications that meet today’s labour needs
– by returning fees and close applications for certain federal skilled
worker applicants who applied under previous criteria.
• Create targeted economic programs through Ministerial
Instructions (outside regulatory scheme) on a timely basis to
address new or emerging economic needs.
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EOI: major step in immigration system modernization
• Canada is developing an Expression of Interest (EOI) approach to
skilled immigrant application management – working with
provinces, territories and employers
• EOI is an automated two-stage application process that prescreens and ranks candidates:
– Results in a pool of candidates interested in skilled immigration to
Canada
– Allows for active selection of the most qualified candidates whose
experience best aligns with economic needs and immigration
priorities
– Makes it possible to avoid application backlogs and reduce
processing times.
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Role of employers
Immigration
• Opportunity for enhanced role in selecting immigrants
• CIC will be looking to hear employers’ interests and perspectives on the
design and application of an EOI system to Canada.
Integration
• BC employers have long had an active role in labour market integration,
e.g.
– Hiring immigrants already in Canada
– Providing opportunities through work experience, mentorship, networking
opportunities – promising practices.
• CIC is interested in hearing about ways we can collaborate to facilitate
the integration of newcomers.
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Conclusion/Discussion
• As employers, you can help ensure Canada is a first-choice
destination for immigrants.
• Modernization is an opportunity for an enhanced role for
employers, to facilitate better match between immigrant supply
and labour market demand.
• What are the roles that employers are ready to play?
• Who else should CIC be talking to, and where?
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