Critics slam CAQ government's 3rd attempt at reforming popular immigration program

CAQ Immigration Minister Nadine Girault has announced reforms to the Quebec Experience Program, which gives foreign students and temporary workers a fast track to permanent residency in Canada.

The CAQ abandoned two previous attempts at reform under the previous immigration minister, Simon Jolin-Barrette, after they were widely criticized for being unfair to would-be immigrants and unresponsive to the needs of Quebec employers.

Once again, the reforms are being slammed.

"I think the best we can say is it's less bad than the previous version," said Derek Chalk, a member of the Quebec Immigration Lawyers Association.

"The government has not listened to us, has not listened to any stakeholders who expressed concern about the reform," said Thibault Camara, who speaks for the group Quebec Is Us Too.

Student groups said in a statement that Girault's reforms represented "false progress," while the Quebec federation of school service centres, an umbrella group for the centres that have replaced school boards, called the reforms "insufficient."

CBC News
CBC News

Lives up-ended

The Quebec Experience Program was started under the previous Liberal government, and it was popular with both would-be immigrants and Quebec businesses.

It gave thousands of foreign students who graduated from post-secondary schools in the province, as well as people working in the province for more than a year on temporary permits, a short cut on the path to Canadian citizenship.

Last fall, in the CAQ government's first attempt at reforming the program, Jolin-Barrette tried to cut the number of programs and specialties whose graduates qualified for the program.

The changes were to take effect immediately, meaning thousands of students who had upended their lives to study in Quebec with the hope that they'd eventually be able to settle here were left in the lurch.

After a public outcry, Jolin-Barrette backtracked, and Premier François Legault admitted the government had made a mistake.

Jolin-Barrette introduced a second package of reforms in the spring, which were once again roundly criticized.

Girault became the minister last month after a cabinet shuffle, and presented a third attempt.

Broken promise

After the first failed reform attempt last fall, Legault promised he would add a grandfather clause that would ensure students who applied under the old rules wouldn't be affected by changes to the program.

Critics said Thursday's announcement effectively breaks that promise.

Instead of a grandfather clause, Girault announced what she called a "transition measure" that would ensure students who graduate before the end of 2020 would still be subject to the old rules.

David Chalk and Associates
David Chalk and Associates

"The promise was that anyone who was studying in Quebec last November would be grandfathered, and in the end, it's only going to be those who will be finishing their studies by the end of this year," Chalk said.

"Lots of people in first, second, or even third year of a more than three-year program, they will not benefit."

He said thousands of students will once again be left behind. That was echoed by post-secondary student federations.

"These people will see their life plans considerably affected by this half-measure," said the Fédération étudiante collégiale du Québec, the Union étudiante du Québec, and Force Jeunesse, in a joint statement.

Stringent work-experience requirements

The other concession announced by Girault deals with the amount of work experience required to qualify for the program.

When the program first started, foreign students who had graduated from Quebec schools didn't need any work experience to qualify, and temporary foreign workers required one year.

Jolin-Barrette's second attempt at reform announced in late May added a requirement for students to have between one and two years of work experience, depending on their degree, and it upped the work-experience requirement to three years for temporary foreign workers.

Girault's announcement Thursday included a compromise, with a maximum of 18 months' work experience required for students, and a decrease from three years to two for temporary workers.

In addition, Girault's reform allow for time spent doing internships while studying to count toward work experience.

The student groups called this a "weak compromise," saying work experience shouldn't be required at all for international students in order to qualify for the program.

David Chalk said no other province requires two years' work experience for temporary foreign workers to qualify for a fast track to permanent residency.

"We are no longer a competitive province in this country in terms of attracting new immigrants," Chalk said.

Business groups say more change needed

Business groups echoed those concerns, praising some of Girault's compromises but also saying more needs to be done.

The Quebec chapter of the Canadian Federation of Independent Business said the reforms shut out many unskilled workers, which the province needs.

"When we talk about a labour shortage in Quebec, we are mainly talking about vacant positions that require little or no education," said the CFIB's Quebec vice-president, François Vincent, in a statement.

"Why shouldn't they have the same chance of settling in Quebec and relaunching their lives with available jobs and for which they meet the requirements?" he asked.

Both the Quebec Federation of Chambers of Commerce and the Conseil du Patronat, Quebec's largest employers' group, welcomed the changes but said they don't fully address the provincial labour shortage, and they pressed for further tweaks.

Ivanoh Demers/Radio-Canada
Ivanoh Demers/Radio-Canada

Protests will continue

Camara, with Quebec Is Us Too, wondered why the CAQ government ever decided to tinker with the program in the first place.

"The Quebec Experience Program was not problematic. It was working so well. So they are facing a non-problem," Camara said.

Girault repeated the same defence of the reforms expressed by Jolin-Barrette and Legault in the past.

"The goal of all this is to help immigrants integrate in the job market and to be well-positioned, in terms of learning French, for example," Girault said.

Camara, whose group has been holding weekly protests since Jolin-Barrette announced the last package of reforms in the spring, said the group would be demonstrating again this weekend.

"We fight because we want to win, and because we are optimistic," Camara said.

"If we don't welcome immigrants properly, we won't have any. And we need immigrants to develop our society, and to create the society that we dream about."

Girault insisted Thursday's reform package was the "final version," and no more changes will be made.