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Against Trump & Tariff War, For Migrants

Posted on February 4, 2025

Trump and Trudeau hit pause on the US-Canada tariff war—30 days before the next round. But the real fight is happening elsewhere: migrants are under attack.

Across Canada, people are vowing to “buy Canadian” in defiance of Trump’s threats. This moment requires us all to understand that many Canadian goods are produced by migrants. Migrant workers travel thousands of miles to grow the food on our tables. They plant, harvest, process, and package our meals. They do it under some of the worst working conditions in the country. To support Canadian food, you must defend the people who make it possible. We must also reject all attempts to divide working people – we are not in a fight against American workers, many of whom are also migrants. 

Why is Trump threatening tariffs? 

Trump claims it’s about stopping “illegal immigration” and “poisonous fentanyl.” But the numbers expose the lie. Last year, about 21,000 people were detained in the US crossing over from Canada—a fraction of the US population. And it’s not just Canada – migrants crossing into the US from Mexico have already plummeted due to Biden’s border militarization. Similarly, less than 0.2% of fentanyl entering into the US comes from Canada. And the issue is not where drugs come from, its about sowing division by villainizing working class drug users. 

So what’s this really about? Power, profit, and fear.

Trump and his billionaire friends like Elon Musk—whose net worth increased by $170 billion in just one month post election—need distractions and division. Maligning and scapegoating migrants overwhelms the news cycle. At a time where the working class is experiencing low-wages, hunger and precarious housing, we are being tricked into believing that migrants are the problem, drowning out the real issue: the rich are getting richer off our backs.

Canada’s War on Migrants

Canadian politicians have already been singing from the Trump hymn-book. 

In 2024, migrants were scapegoated for the housing and affordability crisis, and federal Liberals made dozens of cuts resulting in over 3,000 people per day losing their work or study permits in 2025 and 2026. Our friends, family members and neighbours who built roots here, are now being forced to leave or stay or become undocumented. This distracted many of us from the fact that 2024 was the year of the highest income inequality in Canada ever recorded. 

Now, as part of the tariff deal, Trudeau pushed by the Conservatives is throwing $1.3 billion into border surveillance—more RCMP, more drones, more CBSA officers. 

But that’s not all. When this package was announced in December, the Liberals are floating even more Trump-style policies (that have not been implemented):

  • Mass deportations
  • Sweeping powers to cancel immigration documents, including visas, as well as reject applications already made, and stop accepting applications
  • Restrictions and attacks on countries refusing to accept deportees

These are Conservative-like policies, and so the Conservative Leader wants to go even further. And the Conservatives? Pierre Poilievre is calling for helicopters and the military at the border. Just like Trump did when he deployed the U.S. Army to the Mexico border. 

Defend Migrants

People across Canada are standing up against Trump’s overreach, vowing to buy Canadian-made products. Our choices cannot be about acting as consumers alone, we must act as workers, acting in solidarity with all workers – including those exploited in the United States. 

Canada’s food industry runs on migrant labour. Fruits, vegetables, meat, wine, flowers—all harvested by migrants, many earning poverty wages, facing abuse, and denied basic rights. Amnesty International calls the conditions “shocking abuse and discrimination.”

Solidarity does not begin and end at the checkout aisle. To ensure justice, we must also fight for full immigration status for all.

Against Trump, Migrant Exploitation and Division

Tariffs are on pause. The war on migrants and our scapegoating is not. Rich CEOs in Canada keep getting richer – earning 210 times more than the average worker. We must take action:

  • Forward this to three friends.
  • Urge them to subscribe and take action: www.MigrantRights.ca/RightsNotCuts.
  • Build a massive movement of solidarity between working people everywhere against the richest few who are distracting us.

Reflecting on 2024, Towards a Defiant 2025. 

Posted on December 29, 2024

2024 has been a year of an escalating war on migrants. 

We began the year continuing our fight for regularization of undocumented people. A comprehensive proposal was taken to Cabinet in May. But instead of choosing dignity and rights, Ministers chose racism, rejecting the proposal.

Throughout the year, the federal government adopted one Conservative-style immigration policy after another, stripping rights from millions. By Fall, migrant scapegoating for the housing crisis—sparked in 2023—reached a crescendo. Over the next two years, 2.3 million permits are set to expire, forcing our friends, neighbours, and family members to either leave or become undocumented.

The shift towards right-wing, anti-immigrant ideology is undeniable. Seven years ago, when Trump was first elected, Prime Minister Trudeau declared that “refugees are welcome.” Now, as Trump returns to power, the Canadian government has allocated $1.3 billion to increase border policing and create a “border strike force.”

In the face of stunning policy shifts, migrant scapegoating and rising xenophobia, we fought back. Together, the Migrant Rights Network and the migrant justice movement took action to defend our communities. We secured permanent resident status on arrival for care workers (though still not implemented), and some attacks on international students were reversed. We stopped many deportations. 

These victories were only possible because of collective action: over 500 organizations joined us, and tens of thousands of people including you signed petitions, made phone calls, and took to the streets.

 

Looking Ahead: A Defiant 2025

We will continue to organize and mobilize in 2025. We will resist all political parties trafficking in xenophobia. We will do mass public education and organize to counter anti-immigrant rhetoric that seeks to distract working class people from holding the wealthy and powerful accountable.

As we reflect on the end of 2024, we invite you to be defiant in 2025. 

  • Courageously oppose racism and division wherever it emerges.
  • Reject the unprincipled politics of the Liberals and the racism of the Conservatives, before, during, and after the federal elections.
  • Refuse to accept predetermined electoral outcomes—organize like our future depends on it, because it does.
  • Commit to ending wars, genocides, climate collapse, and capitalist extraction that force people to migrate.
  • Defend, protect, and love our people, our communities, and our planet.

Together, we fight. When we fight, we win. Justice will prevail.

If you can, please donate to power up the migrant justice movement in 2025
 

2024 Highlights: Mobilizing for Justice

 
  • March 16 – 17, 2024: Thousands of us marched in 8 cities across the country to launch Migrant Spring, uniting against racism and demanding permanent resident status for all. Watch on Global News.
  • Fathers Day: Undocumented fathers and children gathered at MP Chrystia Freeland’s office to share their experiences of family separation and why we need regularization and permanent resident status for all undocumented people. Watch on CTV.
  • September 12-15, 2024: thousands of people took to the streets in Charlottetown, Edmonton, Moncton, Niagara, Ottawa, Peterborough, Sudbury, Toronto and Vancouver to tell the incoming Parliament to ensure justice and permanent resident status for migrants.
  • November-December: In November, we organized a week against racism with actions in Montreal, Vancouver and Toronto and in December we joined the International Migrant Alliance – Canada, mobilizing in eight cities across the country. 

Uniting for Regularization

 
  • April 2024: We delivered petitions from nearly 40,000 people to almost every Cabinet Minister, calling for regularization.
  • May 2024: Undocumented people bravely unmasked themselves across the country, demanding status. Prime Minister Trudeau publicly expressed support for regularization.
  • On the morning of the Cabinet discussion, we organized a massive press conference on Parliament Hill to show broad, unified support for regularization.
  • Summer 2024 on: Immigration Ministers began pushing a narrower program, excluding many migrants. We continue to fight for status for ALL.

Winning Permanent Resident Status & Rights for Migrants

 
  • Care Workers: Migrant care workers organized, gathered petition signatures, and held press conferences, winning an end to unfair language and education requirements and securing permanent resident status on arrival in June after a decade of struggle. However, implementation still has not happened.
  • Farm & Fishery Workers: In October 2024, migrant farm and fishery workers from across the country spoke up about the abuse they faced. 
  • Queer Migrants: We marked the International Day Against Homophobia with queer undocumented refugees calling on the PM to keep his promise.  
  • Health Justice: Migrant workers took action for healthcare speaking out from Edmonton to Toronto. 
  • Building power: Thousands of people sent emails; and nearly 200 organizations wrote an open letter to the federal government insisting on rights not cuts, culminating in a press conference on Parliament Hill, the day the new immigration levels were discussed in committee.
  • 500+ organizations and millions of people who value fairness and equality support a regularization program guaranteeing permanent resident #StatusForAlll.

Opposing Lies, Telling Truths

 

Throughout the year, we exposed misinformation and spread the truth:

  • Highlighted how landlords, speculators, and weakened rent controls—not migrants—are responsible for the housing crisis. Watch how to fight back against Canada’s anti-immigrant backlash, read an op-ed in the Toronto Star, and share graphics from our social media channels. 
  • Amplified the United Nations condemnation of Canada’s migrant programs as breeding grounds for slavery. Watch and read news coverage of migrants speaking out here, here, here, here, read statements from migrant workers here, and an op-ed in the Toronto Star here.  
  • Fact-checked Prime Minister Trudeau’s video about immigration with our friends in the Breach.
  • Spoke out against Trumpism and border scapegoating. See our social media fact check here, our corrections in the media here and here.  
  • Tracked immigration changes throughout 2024.
  • Pushed back against racism being used to divide working class people, joined with climate justice, women’s rights and worker rights movements and more.

 

775 000 personnes exclues

Posted on October 15, 2024

Nous refusons d’accepter ces changements. Nous refusons d’être blâmés. Nous continuerons à lutter pour le statut de résident permanent pour tous les migrants, y compris les travailleurs, les étudiants et les sans-papiers.

Envoyer un e-mail maintenant

Nous assistons à l’une des plus importantes régressions des droits des personnes migrantes et immigrantes et de leur accès au pays dans l’histoire du Canada. Le gouvernement réduit le nombre de travailleuses et travailleurs personnes migrantes, d’étudiantes et étudiants étrangers et de réfugié-e-s. Il promet également de réduire encore le nombre de résidents permanents, après l’avoir déjà plafonné.

Avec les changements annoncés au cours de l’année dernière, mais surtout la semaine dernière, au moins 775 000 personnes sont exclues. De nombreuses autres règles sont également modifiées, de sorte que les personnes migrantes déjà présentes dans le pays seront contraintes de devenir des sans-papiers et de se retrouver dans des situations vulnérables et précaires. Ces changements ont un impact disproportionné sur les personnes migrantes issus des classes travailleuses.

Non seulement un million de personnes – plus que la population de Winnipeg – seront exclues ou déportées, mais les personnes migrantes qui resteront seront aussi:

  • Contraintes d’occuper de mauvais emplois : Avec moins d’accès aux permis de travail et à la résidence permanente, davantage de personnes seront obligées de compter sur le parrainage d’un employeur pour rester au Canada. Cela signifie plus de pouvoir pour les patrons et plus d’exploitation.
  • Séparées de leur famille : Moins de permis de travail pour les membres de la famille signifie que davantage de familles seront déchirées.
  • Obligées de payer plus pour moins : Des exigences financières plus élevées, moins d’heures de travail pour les détenteurs de permis d’études, de nouveaux tests linguistiques et l’obligation pour les travailleuses et travailleurs de renouveler leur permis chaque année signifient plus de stress et plus de coûts pour les travailleuses et travailleurs.
  • Confrontées à la violence raciste : Au cours du mois dernier, un étudiant indien a été poignardé à Edmonton, un restaurant géré par des Syriens a été incendié à St. Catharines, une mosquée a été attaquée à Antigonish et un réfugié colombien noir a été tué par la police à Vancouver. Cette montée de la violence raciste est le résultat direct de la montée du sentiment anti-immigrés alimenté par la rhétorique politique et médiatique. Ces restrictions reviennent à affirmer que les personnes migrantes sont responsables de la crise d’accessibilité financière, ce qui ne fera qu’aggraver la xénophobie.

Il s’agit d’une trahison inacceptable des promesses libérales par le biais d’une politique d’immigration de type conservateur.

Au début de ce mandat, en décembre 2021, le Premier ministre Trudeau avait promis de garantir le statut de résident permanent aux travailleuses et travailleurs personnes migrantes, aux étudiantes et étudiants et aux personnes sans papiers. Pas plus tard qu’en mai 2024, le ministre de l’Immigration a déclaré que le moyen de réduire le nombre de résidents temporaires était de leur offrir la possibilité de rester en permanence.

Au lieu de tenir leur promesse, les libéraux fédéraux mettent en place des politiques d’immigration de type conservateur dans l’espoir que cela les aidera dans les sondages. Des élites dans le gouvernement et des médias diffusent une rhétorique de droite et un sentiment anti-immigrés. Au lieu de les combattre, les libéraux fédéraux les acceptent. Les gouvernements provinciaux responsables de l’emploi, du logement, des soins de santé et de l’éducation se tournent vers d’autres boucs émissaires pour détourner l’attention de leurs propres échecs – le sous-investissement dans ces domaines se poursuivra quels que soient les niveaux d’immigration. Cette stratégie de réduction de l’immigration échouera électoralement pour les libéraux, et les abus et la violence à l’encontre des personnes migrantes augmenteront.

Changer les règles au milieu du jeu

Les changements déjà annoncés vont se traduire par :

  • 300 000 étudiantes et étudiants internationaux en moins
  • 175 000 titulaires de permis de travail post-diplôme (PGWP) en moins
  • 100 000 travailleuses et travailleurs étrangers en moins
  • 200 000 titulaires de PGWP supplémentaires déjà présents au Canada seront contraints de partir.

Un nombre inconnu de réfugié-e-s et de résidents permanents qui auraient pu venir au Canada seront également exclus.

Ces réductions sont présentées comme des coupes dans les nouveaux permis, mais elles affecteront les étudiantes et étudiants internationaux et les travailleuses et travailleurs personnes migrantes déjà présents au Canada. Du jour au lendemain, la vie de centaines de milliers de personnes est bouleversée.

Les personnes migrantes ne sont pas responsables de la crise du logement et de l’accessibilité financière. En réduisant le nombre de personnes migrantes, on laisse les vrais responsables s’en tirer à bon compte.

Les personnes migrantes vivent souvent dans des logements contrôlés par l’employeur ou dans des logements surpeuplés et non conformes aux normes, sans bénéficier des droits fondamentaux des locataires. Ils ne sont pas en concurrence pour les maisons individuelles. Alors que la population a augmenté de 3,9 %, les prix des logements ont augmenté de plus de 20 %, tandis que des centaines de milliers de logements locatifs restent vides parce que les propriétaires pratiquent des loyers excessifs. Blâmer les personnes migrantes est une façon de détourner le regard de ces réalités.

Les prix des denrées alimentaires ont augmenté plus vite que l’inflation parce que les monopoles de l’alimentation ont un pouvoir incontrôlé. Les travailleuses et travailleurs personnes migrantes qui cultivent, transforment, emballent et livrent les aliments sont confrontés à des conditions de travail dangereuses et à de faibles salaires.

Ces réductions pénaliseront également tous les travailleuses et travailleurs.

Blâmer les personnes migrantes est un outil aux mains des élites dirigeantes pour distraire et diviser les travailleuses et travailleurs. Ces réductions ne s’attaqueront pas aux décisions des entreprises et des politiques qui ont conduit à des bas salaires, à un taux de chômage élevé et à des logements inabordables.

La population canadienne vieillit, les gens ont moins d’enfants et le secteur manufacturier ne s’est pas développé. Au lieu d’investir dans les personnes et de garantir le statut de résident permanent aux personnes migrantes afin qu’elles puissent soutenir la population vieillissante et l’économie à long terme, les libéraux et les conservateurs ont eu recours à l’immigration temporaire pour faire venir des centaines de milliers de travailleuses et travailleurs migrants et d’étudiantes et étudiants internationaux afin de déverser de l’argent dans l’économie sans leur donner de droits en retour. En plus de leur travail et de leurs ressources, les personnes migrantes cotisent à des services sociaux tels que le RPC et l’assurance-emploi, ainsi qu’aux impôts fédéraux et provinciaux, mais se voient refuser la plupart des services. Cela signifie que les personnes migrantes subventionnent le filet de sécurité sociale. En fait, selon le Fonds monétaire international, le Canada a évité deux récessions sur le dos des personnes migrantes ces dernières années.

Ces réductions s’accompagnent de l’absence de tout investissement réel dans le logement, l’industrie manufacturière ou les soins de santé et entraîneront une contraction économique qui se traduira par une baisse des salaires et une hausse des prix pour tout le monde.

Nous refusons d’accepter ces changements. Nous refusons d’être blâmés. Nous continuerons à nous battre pour obtenir le statut de résident permanent pour tous les personnes migrantes, y compris les travailleuses et travailleurs, les étudiantes et étudiants et les sans-papiers.


Détails des changements annoncés depuis un an

  1. Travailleuses et travailleurs étrangers temporaires – 100 000 personnes supprimées :
  • Pas d’EIMT dans les zones à fort taux de chômage : À partir du 26 septembre 2024, les EIMT (évaluations de l’impact sur le marché du travail) ne seront plus délivrées dans les régions où le taux de chômage est supérieur à 6 %, sauf pour certains emplois dans des secteurs tels que les soins, l’agriculture, la construction, la fabrication de produits alimentaires et l’éducation. Les EIMT constituent la première étape avant que les personnes migrantes puissent demander un permis de travail. Ceux qui se trouvent déjà au Canada ne pourront pas renouveler leur permis.
  • Plafonnement des postes à bas salaires dans le cadre de l’EIMT : À partir du 26 septembre 2024, les employeurs ne pourront pas embaucher plus de 10 % de leur effectif en main d’œuvre par le biais d’une EIMT à bas salaire, sauf dans certains secteurs (par exemple, l’agriculture, la prestation de soins, les soins de santé, certains programmes de relations publiques). Les personnes qui se trouvent déjà au Canada ne pourront pas renouveler leur permis.
  • Permis de travail plus courts : Les permis de travail pour les bas salaires (à l’exception de l’agriculture primaire) seront limités à un an. Les personnes migrantes devront payer des sommes importantes pour renouveler leur permis de travail chaque année.
  • Réduction des permis de travail familiaux : Seuls les conjoints des travailleuses et travailleurs occupant des postes de direction pourront prétendre à un permis de travail. Même les travailleuses et travailleurs à haut salaire, par exemple les chefs cuisiniers et les chauffeurs routiers, seront séparés de leurs familles. L’extension promise des permis de travail pour les membres de la famille des travailleuses et travailleurs faiblement rémunérés a été annulée. Ces changements ciblent les femmes de manière disproportionnée.
  • Fin des permis de travail pour les visiteurs : À partir du 28 août 2024, les visiteurs ne pourront plus obtenir de permis de travail temporaire sans quitter le Canada. De nombreux travailleuses et travailleurs personnes migrantes comptaient sur cette option pour ne pas perdre leur statut et leur revenu en attendant que le gouvernement traite leur demande.
  1. Permis d’études – 300 000 personnes supprimées :
  •   Plafonnement des permis d’études : Le gouvernement plafonne le nombre de permis d’études de premier cycle et de niveau collégial en 2024 et ajoute des plafonds pour les étudiantes et étudiants de deuxième et troisième cycle en 2025. Ceux qui sont déjà au Canada ne pourront pas non plus obtenir de nouveaux permis si les plafonds sont atteints.
  • Doublement de la preuve de fonds : À partir de janvier 2024, les étudiantes et étudiants étrangers devront prouver qu’ils disposent de plus de fonds sur leurs comptes bancaires, soit en moyenne 20 635 dollars par personne plus les frais de scolarité, contre 10 000 dollars auparavant.
  • Interdiction pour les familles : Les conjoints des étudiantes et étudiants de premier cycle et des étudiantes et étudiants universitaires ne peuvent plus obtenir de permis de travail. Ceux qui suivent des programmes d’études supérieures de moins de 16 mois ne pourront pas non plus être rejoints par leur famille à partir de l’automne 2024.
  • Restrictions sur les heures de travail : À partir d’avril 2024, les étudiantes et étudiants étrangers ne pourront plus travailler que 20 heures en dehors du campus, puis 24 heures à une date qui n’a pas encore été annoncée. Les étudiantes et étudiants qui n’ont pas d’autre choix que de travailler davantage pour payer des frais de scolarité élevés seront contraints de travailler sans papiers et risqueront d’être davantage exploités.
  1. Étudiantes et étudiants internationaux diplômés – 375 000 personnes exclues
  • Les permis de travail promis sont supprimés : Les étudiants des collèges privés obtenant leur diplôme après le 15 mai 2024 ne pourront pas bénéficier de permis de travail post-diplôme (PGWP in english). Ceux qui demandent des permis d’études après le 1er novembre 2024 dans des collèges publics ne seront pas non plus éligibles, à moins que leur emploi ne se situe dans des secteurs spécifiques.
  • Nouvelles exigences en matière de tests linguistiques : À partir du 1er novembre 2024, des résultats linguistiques minimums seront exigés pour l’obtention d’un permis de travail.
  • Pas de renouvellement des permis de travail : Le gouvernement a annoncé qu’il ne renouvellerait plus les PGWP , et plus de 200 000 e permis de travail post-diplôme devraient expirer d’ici 2025. Beaucoup de ces personnes migrantes sont ici depuis des années et se retrouvent coincées dans un processus cauchemardesque.
  1. Politiques relatives aux réfugié-e-s :
  •  Augmentation des refus de visa : Bien qu’aucune politique officielle n’ait été publiée, le ratio des demandes de visa de visiteur refusées par rapport aux demandes approuvées était plus élevé en juin qu’à n’importe quel moment depuis le point le plus haut atteint pendant la pandémie. En janvier, février, mai et juin 2024, le nombre de demandes refusées était supérieur au nombre de demandes approuvées. Nombre de ces personnes pourraient être des demandeurs d’asile.
  • Augmentation des refus aux frontières : Bien qu’aucune politique officielle n’ait été publiée, les agents frontaliers ont refusé en moyenne 3 727 voyageurs étrangers par mois au cours des sept premiers mois de 2024, soit une augmentation de 633 personnes, ou 20 %, par rapport à l’année précédente. Nombre d’entre eux sont des réfugié-e-s potentiels qui sont refoulés.
  • Modifications des demandes d’asile mexicaines : Au lieu de traiter les demandes d’asile individuelles du Mexique, le Canada a imposé des exigences en matière de visa afin de rendre plus difficile la venue des réfugié-e-s.
  1. Résidence permanente :
  •   Plafonnement des admissions : Le nombre de résidents permanents a été plafonné pour 2025 et 2026. Cela signifie qu’il y a moins de possibilités pour les personnes migrantes de passer à la résidence permanente et donc plus de risques qu’ils deviennent sans-papiers ou qu’ils soient forcés de partir.
  • Les provinces ferment la porte : Les programmes provinciaux du Yukon, des Territoires du Nord-Ouest, de l’Alberta et de la Saskatchewan ont été brusquement fermés. Le Nouveau-Brunswick, la Nouvelle-Écosse, l’Ontario et l’Île-du-Prince-Édouard ont modifié les règles sans préavis. En conséquence, des milliers de personnes ont été laissées sur le carreau.

2.3 Million People Being Shut Out & Excluded

Posted on September 25, 2024

We refuse to accept these changes. We refuse to be blamed. We will continue to fight for permanent resident status for all migrants, including workers, students, and undocumented people.

We are witnessing one of the most significant rollbacks of migrant rights and access in Canadian history. The government is slashing the numbers of migrant workers, international students, and refugees. It is also promising to further reduce the number of permanent residents, after already capping them.

The federal government has announced that at least 2.3 million permits will expire in the next two years. Many more rules are also changing, such that migrants already in the country will be forced to become undocumented and pushed into vulnerable and precarious situations. These changes disproportionately impact working class migrants. 

Migrants that remain will be:

  • Forced into Bad Jobs: With less access  to work permits and permanent residency, more people will be forced to rely on employer sponsorships just to stay in Canada. This means more power for bosses and more exploitation .
  • Separated from their families: Fewer work permits for family members mean more families will be torn apart.
  • Pay more for less: Higher financial requirements, fewer hours of work for study permit holders, new language tests, and requiring workers to renew permits each year means more stress and more costs for workers
  • Face racist violence: In just the past month, an Indian student was stabbed to death in Edmonton, a Syrian-run restaurant was set on fire in St. Catharines, a mosque was attacked in Antigonish and a Black Colombian refugee was killed by police in Vancouver. This increasing racist violence is a direct result of the growing anti-immigrant sentiment fuelled by political and media rhetoric. These cuts effectively affirm that migrants are responsible for the affordability crisis, which will further xenophobia.

This is an unacceptable betrayal of Liberal promises by way of Conservative-style immigration policy.

At the beginning of this mandate, in December 2021, Prime Minister Trudeau promised to ensure permanent resident status for migrant workers, students, and undocumented people. As recently as May 2024, the Minister of Immigration said the way to shrink the number of temporary residents is to offer them the opportunity to remain permanently.

Instead of keeping their promise, the federal Liberals are enacting Conservative-like immigration policies in the hopes that it will help them in the polls. Elites in government and media have been spreading right-wing rhetoric and anti-immigrant sentiment. Instead of combating it, the federal Liberals are accepting it. Provincial governments responsible for jobs, housing, healthcare, and education are turning to further scapegoating to distract from their own failures – this underinvestment  will continue no matter what immigration levels are. This strategy of slashing immigration  will fail electorally for the Liberals, and abuse and violence against migrants will increase.

Migrants are not responsible for the housing and affordability crisis. Slashing migrant numbers leaves those truly responsible off the hook.

Migrants often live in employer-controlled housing or crowded, substandard units without basic tenant rights. They are not competing for single-family homes. While the population has gone up by 3.9%, housing prices have gone up more than 20%, while hundreds of thousands of rental units sit empty because landlords are rent gouging. Blaming migrants is a distraction.

Food prices have gone up higher than the price of inflation because grocery monopolies have unchecked power. Migrant workers who grow, process, pack, and deliver food face unsafe working conditions and low wages.

These cuts will also hurt all working people.

Blaming migrants is a tool of the ruling elites to distract and divide  workers. These cuts will not address the corporate and policy decisions that have led to low wages, high unemployment, and unaffordable housing.

Canada’s population is aging, people are having fewer children, and the manufacturing sector has not grown. Instead of investing in people and ensuring permanent resident status for immigrants so they can sustain the aging population and the economy for the long run, Liberals and Conservatives have used temporary migration to bring in hundreds of thousands of migrant workers and students to pour money into the economy with no rights in return. In addition to their labour and their resources via high fees, migrants pay into social services like CPP and EI, as well as via federal and provincial taxes, but are denied most of the services. This means that migrants are subsidizing the social safety net. In fact, according to the International Monetary Fund, Canada has avoided two recessions on the backs of migrants in recent years.

These cuts come without any real investment in housing, manufacturing, or healthcare and will result in an economic contraction that will mean lower wages and higher prices for everyone.


Details of the changes announced over the last year

 

Permanent residency

  • Permanent residency has been slashed for 2025 – 2027 limiting opportunities for migrants who are already living and working in Canada to transition to permanent status and increasing their likelihood of becoming undocumented. Particularly low-wage migrants are impacted. Even accepted refugees will be excluded. Questions remain about promised programs such as permanent residency on landing for care workers. 
  • Provincial Programs Abruptly Closed: Programs in Yukon, Northwest Territories, Alberta, and Saskatchewan have been abruptly closed, while New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Ontario, and PEI have changed rules without warning and spaces in these programs have been cut, leaving hundreds of thousands of migrants in limbo. Many of these programs were the only way through which low-waged workers could apply for permanent residency and this door has been effectively closed for 2025-2027. 
  • Regularization of undocumented people delayed: In December 2021, Prime Minister Trudeau promised comprehensive regularization, a promise reiterated by multiple Immigration Ministers until June 2024, when the Immigration Minister abruptly about-turned despite proclaiming massive economic and humanitarian benefits of regularization. Minister Miller has since promised a smaller, undefined program that has not been announced. 

International students and graduated students

  • No Renewals for Expiring PGWPs: Over 200,000 PGWPs are set to expire by end of 2025, leaving many stranded in Canada, some of whom have already applied for permanent residency, with no other options to stay. Many are being forced to choose between being uprooted and becoming undocumented.
  • Ban on Family Reunification: Spouses of undergraduate and college students can no longer receive work permits, and spouses and children of graduate students in programs shorter than 16 months are also barred from being in Canada as of Fall 2024. 
  • Study Permit Caps: The government capped study permits for undergraduate and college programs in 2024, with caps on graduate students coming in 2025. Even international students already in Canada will be barred from renewing their permits if the cap is reached.
  • Higher Proof of Funds: Since January 2024, international students must show more financial resources—$20,635 per person plus tuition, up from $10,000. These increased requirements effectively shut out lower-income students.
  • Work Hour Restrictions: As of November 2024, international students are limited to 24 off-campus work hours. These limits force those needing more income into undocumented work, increasing their risk of exploitation and wage theft.
  • Restrictions on PGWP Eligibility: Graduates of private colleges and college students in fields not aligned with specific industries are no longer eligible for PGWPs, which are crucial for those wishing to work and settle permanently in Canada. This restriction does not apply to bachelor’s, master’s, or doctoral degree holders.

Temporary foreign workers

  • Cuts to Family Work Permits: Only spouses of workers in managerial jobs will be eligible for work permits. Even high-wage workers, such as chefs and truck drivers, will face family separation. A promised expansion of work permits for family members of low-wage workers has been cancelled, disproportionately affecting women.
  • Shorter Work Permits: Low-wage work permits (except for primary agriculture) will be limited to one year. Migrants will be forced to pay high fees to renew their work permits annually.
  • No LMIAs in High Unemployment Areas: Starting September 26, 2024, Labour Market Impact Assessments (LMIAs) will not be issued in areas with over 6% unemployment, except for certain jobs in caregiving, agriculture, construction, food manufacturing, and education. Those already in Canada will be unable to renew their permits.
  • Cap on Low-Wage LMIA Positions: Starting September 26, 2024, employers cannot hire more than 10% of their workforce through low-wage LMIAs, except in some industries like farming – one of the sectors with the most rampant labour violations – and caregiving. Those already in Canada will also be unable to renew their permits.
  • End to Work Permits for Visitors: As of August 28, 2024, visitors can no longer transition to temporary work permits without leaving Canada, an option that many relied on to maintain status and income during long government delays in processing applications.

Refugees

  • Increased Visa Rejections and Border Refusals: Reports indicate a surge in rejected visitor visa applications, with a higher ratio of refusals compared to approvals this year. Border officers are also turning away an average of 3,727 foreign travelers each month, many of whom may be potential refugees for whom the government has eliminated other options.
  • 14,000 places slashed from the humanitarian component of immigration levels: These cuts impact real people fleeing persecution and seeking safety in Canada or struggling in conflict zones around the world facing violence, starvation, and death. The cuts in the humanitarian component particularly fails those already here whom we have committed to protect and their family members abroad, all but ensuring families will remain separated for many years to come.

Take Action on September 14-15: Say Yes to Immigration Justice! Say No to Racism!

Posted on August 21, 2024

Actions taking place across the country! Join now.

Reflecting on 10 years of care worker struggles and victories

Posted on June 12, 2024

Something incredible happened on June 3rd. The federal government announced that migrant care workers who come to Canada will be able to get permanent resident status on arrival.

This means that migrants, primarily racialized women, who take care of children, sick and the elderly will be able to come as permanent residents and not as temporary foreign workers.

For decades, migrant workers have been told that our demand for a single tier system with permanent resident status on arrival for all is impossible. But through struggle and perseverance, migrants have won against all odds.

We won even more:

  • Since 2014, care workers have been calling for an end to the requirement that they have their one-year post-secondary education accredited. Now, care workers will only have to get high school accreditation.
  • Care workers have been fighting to get rid of language scoring requirements. Now care workers will only need a language benchmark score of 4 (instead of 5).

As a result, thousands of care workers in Canada may become eligible for permanent residency.

But concerns remain.

  • thousands of care workers, like other migrant workers, students and refugees have become undocumented because of unfair rules. This is why we must continue to demand regularization of all undocumented people.
  • The program has not been finalized and launched yet. It’s not clear when it will be – the Minister has said somewhere between Fall 2024 and early 2025. While we wait, more care workers will continue to face exploitation or become undocumented.
Send an email to PM Trudeau now asking him to ensure regularization for all

Now is a moment to reflect on a decade of struggle. Here are snapshots of care worker action since 2014 when the education and language requirements were first put into place.

Snapshots of a decade of struggle

October 31, 2014: Then Conservative Immigration Minister Chris Alexander ended the permanent caregiver program and replaced it with two 5-year long pilot programs, which continue until 2019. This new program increased language testing scores needed to qualify and added a requirement for one year post-secondary education. Care workers sprang into action organizing mass demonstrations across Canada including in Toronto. Read more here.

October 28, 2015: Care workers joined with farmworkers, and other migrant workers to create the Coalition for Migrant Worker Rights – Canada (CMWRC). CMWRC was the first migrant-led cross-Canada platform for all migrant workers to take action together and was formed just as a new Liberal government was elected in the same month.

May 2016: We forced a Parliamentary study on migrant exploitation. Migrant care worker “Teta Bayan” was scheduled to speak. She was bumped off the committee and wrote an open letter calling on PM Trudeau to deliver on his promise of change. Read here. Care worker groups submitted a detailed proposal to Parliament calling for changes to the same study, read here. 

September 2016: Care workers took on organizing against medical inadmissibility. Medical inadmissibility are rules that ban migrants from getting permanent residency because the government believed that they were too sick. Care workers told their stories in the media, visited politicians and gathered petitions. Read here. We finally won changes in 2018.

2017: Throughout 2017, migrant care workers organized across the country, hosting workshops and public events, doing outreach in communities and identifying concerns. Vancouver Committee for Domestic Worker and Caregiver Rights hosted this workshop.

Mother’s Day 2018: Across the country, migrant care workers escalated actions on Mother’s Day organizing media events calling for changes. In Toronto, care workers organized an action dressed as robots insisting that migrants were not machines. Read about Toronto here and Vancouver here.

Summer 2018: Migrant care workers surveyed each other and collected petitions to organize themselves with just one year left in the pilot program. Throughout the year, care workers participated in consultations calling for changes. Read here.

November 18, 2018: Landed Status Now, an umbrella formation of care workers across Canada, issued a report detailing abuses and demanded permanent resident status on arrival and removal of language and education restrictions. Read about it in the CBC here and here, and read the report here.

December 18, 2018:The Migrant Rights Network launched and replaced CMWRC. This newly formed coalition would now be the home of all migrant-led organizing in Canada, and carried forward the Landed Status Now campaign.

February 23, 2019: Under massive pressure from care workers – Canada announced an interim pathway! Care workers in Canada were able to apply for permanent residency without the high education requirements, but the language requirements were kept in place. The interim program ran from March to June – just three months. Unbelievably, the government also replaced the 2014-2019 pilots with new pilots that had the same unfair language and education requirements. Care workers were pre-assessed for permanent residency and would have to complete two years of work before they could apply again to get it.

May & June 2019: Care workers organized actions across Canada demanding changes to the new pilots and extensions to the interim program. See here. Thousands of people signed petitions and took action. Under pressure the federal government extended the Interim Pathway by another three months, until the end of October.

March 2020: The COVID-19 outbreak threw migrant care workers into crisis. Many were working longer hours, unable to leave; while others were laid off as their employers worked from home. Caregivers spoke up about being banned by their employers from leaving the house, to buy groceries or send money home. Those who were laid off had nowhere to go, many would become undocumented.

October 2020: Care workers across the country released a report documenting the increased abuse and exploitation that they were facing behind closed doors. The report consisted of hundreds of interviews and surveys and made national headlines. Read about it in the Toronto Star here and CBC here. The report included video interviews, watch them here.

April 14, 2021: Under pressure from migrant organizing – Canada created the ‘Temporary Resident to Permanent Resident’ pathway for over 90,000 migrant workers. Among other changes, this pathway removed requirements for education, reduced the language and work requirement (from 24 months to 12 months) – but the program was time-limited and difficult to apply for. Some care workers were able to apply; while many remained excluded. The program ran for six months. Read our report on it here. At the same time, the federal government promised to clear the backlog of applicants – with thousands still waiting for years to hear about their permanent residency application, see here.

December 16, 2021: Following the 2021 federal elections, Prime Minister Trudeau returned to power at the head of a minority government. He issued a mandate letter to the Minister of Immigration that promised regularization and rights for migrants.

May 29, 2022: Migrant care workers delivered over 3,000 petitions to MPs across the country calling for an end to education and language requirements, an end to the processing backlog and permanent resident status on arrival. 

2022 – 2023: Across the country, care workers prepared for the expiry of the pilot, gathering thousands of petition signatures, coordinating with allies, meeting with elected officials and Ministry staff, and sharing stories on social media. In monthly actions – care workers raised their demands across the country.

February 10, 2023: Care workers won a major victory – the work experience required to gain permanent residency was reduced by half – from 24 months to 12 months. Care workers were one more step close to permanent resident status on landing.

March 8, 2024: On International Women’s Day – migrant care workers organized a press conference calling for an end to education and language requirements and permanent resident status on arrival. Read more here.

June 3, 2024: Canada announced new pilot programs lowering the education and language requirement and promising permanent resident status on arrival.

We have been fighting for decades, and we will not stop until we have won justice, equality and liberation for all.

Cabinet to vote on #StatusForAll — Tell them to REGULARIZE EVERYONE

Posted on April 5, 2024

Don’t let PM Trudeau break his promise. Tell him to ensure equality and justice for all.

2024 Organizational Letters of Support for Regularization & #StatusforAll

Posted on March 25, 2024

Join major organizations across the country who are writing letters to Prime Minister Trudeau and Immigration Minister Marc Miller in support of regularization and Status for All. If you are a leader in an organization, use this template to write an original letter for permanent resident status and against xenophobia and send it to the Prime Minister and the Immigration Minister. This is not a sign-on letter, but a tool to use to draft your own letter. We need to show the federal government that many communities are paying attention.

Now is a pivotal moment in the fight for regularization and Status for All.  Even if you’ve previously written a letter, it’s crucial to submit a new one reiterating the specific demands outlined in the template above. We must ensure that both the Prime Minister and the Immigration Minister are aware that organizations across the country share expectations regarding what comprehensive regularization must entail.

We are setting the bar, together.

2024 Letters of Support for Regularization and #StatusForAll

  • 350 Canada
  • Abrigo Centre
  • Access Alliance Multicultural Health and Community Services
  • Action Canada for Sexual Health & Rights
  • Association for the Rights of Household and Farm Workers
  • BC Poverty Reduction Coalition
  • Canadian Centre For Policy Alternatives (CCPA)
  • Canadian Council for Refugees
  • Canadian Federation of Nurses Unions
  • Canadian Labour Congress (CLC)
  • Canadian Medical Association (CMA)
  • Canadian Paediatric Society (CPS)
  • Canadian Union of Postal Workers (CUPW)
  • Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) Ontario
  • Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE)
  • Caregiver Connections Education and Support Organization (CCESO)
  • Citizens for Public Justice
  • Climate Action Network Canada – Réseau action climat Canada (CAN-Rac)
  • Climate Justice Toronto (CJTO)
  • ClimateFast
  • Coalition of Progressive Electors (COPE)
  • Cooper Institute
  • CUPE 1281
  • Durham Region Labour Council
  • Elementary Teachers of Toronto
  • FCJ Refugee Centre
  • Family Service Toronto (FST)
  • Federation of Sisters of St. Joseph of Canada
  • Filipino-Canadian CommUNITY of New Brunswick
  • Front d’action populaire en réaménagement urbain
  • Future Ground Network, David Suzuki Foundation
  • Guelph Community Acupuncture
  • Hamilton Social Medicine Response Team (HAMSMaRT)
  • Hamilton Urban Core Community Health Centre
  • Head & Hands
  • Healthcare for All Coalition
  • Health Providers Against Poverty (HPAP)
  • HIV Legal Network
  • Income Security Advocacy Centre (ISAC)
  • Inter Clinic Immigration Working Group (“ICIWG”)
  • Joint Letter: New Brunswick Federation of Labour, Newfoundland & Labrador Federation of Labour, Ontario Federation of Labour, Prince Edward Island Federation of Labour
  • KAIROS
  • La Clinique pour la justice migrante
  • Labour Community Services of Peel
  • Leadnow
  • Madhu Verma Migrant Justice Centre
  • Mining Injustice Solidarity Network
  • National Union of Public and General Employees (NUPGE)
  • Ontario Council of Agencies Serving Immigrants (OCASI)
  • OPSEU/SEFPO
  • Prince Edward Island Chapter of the Council of Canadians
  • Resource Movement
  • Seniors for Climate Action Now
  • Showing Up for Racial Justice (SURJ) Simcoe
  • South Asian Legal Clinic of Ontario (SALCO)
  • Sudbury Workers Education and Advocacy Centre
  • SWAN Vancouver
  • The ‘Chi for Peace
  • The Council of Canadians
  • The Graduate Student Society at Simon Fraser University
  • The Refugee Centre
  • The Socialist Project
  • Toronto and York Region Labour Council
  • Unifor
  • Vancouver Neighbourhood Food Networks
  • Vivimos Juntxs, Comemos Juntxs (VJCJ)
  • West Coast LEAF
  • Women’s Education and Action Fund (LEAF)
  • Worker Solidarity Network
  • Workers’ Action Centre (WAC)
  • York South-Weston Tenant Union

Migrant Spring Ignited!

Posted on March 20, 2024

On March 16 & 17, 2024, in 8 cities, from Charlottetown in PEI to Victoria in BC, we ignited the next stage of our struggle: Migrant Spring. Thousands participated in marches, rallies, community meetings and events. 

Together, we united against migrant scapegoating for the affordability crisis. Together, we demanded regularization for undocumented people without exclusions. With one voice, we called for permanent resident status for international students, careworkers, farmworkers, fishery workers, and other migrant workers. We refused the exclusion of migrants from essential services, and we demanded freedom to work without restriction. 

Watch and share photos and videos of our actions on Facebook | On Twitter | On Instagram

Over a thousand people marched in Toronto last weekend, and hundreds marched in Montreal. More than three hundred people rallied in Vancouver and nearly a hundred people joined in Victoria. Community meetings also took place in Fredericton, and Charlottetown. And social and cultural events took place in Ottawa and St John’s.

Our actions were widely reported in the mainstream media amplifying our voice into people’s homes across the country. A small selection of the coverage includes CP24 and Global News in Toronto; CBC and Global News in Montreal; CBC and City News in Vancouver;  CTV News and Global News in Fredericton, and Chek News in Victoria among many others. Even if you don’t have time to read and watch these, you will boost visibility simply by clicking on the links, as clicks tell media outlets to share stories more widely.

We have a short window ahead of us right now, so actions in the next few weeks are crucial. 

Here’s what to do. 

    1. Send an email: Even if you have sent one already, send an email to all Cabinet members by adding your name here: www.StatusforAll.ca
    2. Make calls with others: Join with your friends and other activists online at 8pm EST / 5pm EST on Thursday, March 21, 2024, the International Day for Elimination of Racism, to make calls to PM Trudeau and Cabinet. Organized by Migrant Workers Alliance for Change. RSVP now: https://migrantworkersalliance.org/march21/ 
    3. Make calls on your own: Can’t join the phone zap on March 21? Use our tool to call and leave a message for Cabinet members in support of our demands. You will connected to the MP’s office and will have a script you can read: https://migrantrights.ca/callforstatus/ 
    4. Write organizational letters: If you are a leader in an organization, use this template to write an original letter for permanent resident status and against xenophobia and send it to the Prime Minister and the Immigration Minister. This is not a sign-on letter, but a tool to use to draft your own letter. We need to show the federal government that many communities are paying attention. 
    5. Get signatures from faith, labour and community organizations: If you attend, or know of local community, faith, or labour groups in your city where you can get the authorized person to sign a letter, download and print this letter and take it to them and ask them to sign it, and send a copy to us. 

The clock is ticking. Many deadlines are coming up. Taking action is timely and necessary:

  • To win comprehensive regularization: Prime Minister Trudeau’s government promised to bring regularization to Cabinet in the Spring. Not only do we need to make sure a program is announced, we need to make sure that the program is inclusive. 
  • To stop the deportation of care workers: Thousands of care workers are at risk of deportation due to expiring programs or have already been excluded because of excessive requirements. The program expires on June 17 – we must act now.
  • To create fair immigration laws: The federal government has capped permanent immigration. International students and their family permits have been restricted. Visas have been imposed on Mexico. Sudanese and Palestinian refugees face exceptional hurdles unlike Ukrainian refugees. The 20-hour work limit is set to be placed on international students on April 30th. These caps and exclusions mean that bad bosses can exploit migrants more, and racialized migrants are denied rights. We must act now to stop bad laws, and ensure better laws. 
  • To #UniteAgainstRacim: Landlords, grocery monopolies, and governments are scapegoating migrants, blaming us for the housing and affordability crisis and perpetuating racism and division. This allows those in power to continue to push bad laws that affect everyone – both migrants and citizens. Winning equal rights for migrants is one of the most effective ways to stop the rise of racism.

Migrant Spring

Posted on February 29, 2024

Spring is coming, the snow will melt, let’s get ready. Mark your calendars for March 16-17, 2024, as we launch Migrant Spring!

Celebrating 5 Years of Migrant Rights Network

Posted on December 18, 2023

Today, International Migrants Day, is the 5 anniversary of the founding of Migrant Rights Network. Today marks half a decade of historic organizing, mobilizing and winning migrant justice across these lands. 

Just days ago, Immigration Minister Marc Miller reiterated the federal government’s commitment to creating a path for permanent resident status for undocumented people, promising “broad and comprehensive” regularization. His announcement came shortly after we exposed Prime Minister Trudeau overseeing 39 deportations a day, costing at least $50 million annually since he pledged the program in December 2021. He has re-made a promise, and we will make sure he keeps it. 

Today, we look back at our struggles and our victories over the last five years. 

Year 1, 2019: Uniting Against Racism and Winning Rights for Care Workers

We launched on December 18, 2018, with a campaign of relationship building and political education called “Unite Against Racism.” Throughout our first year, we forged ties with labor unions, training hundreds of rank-and-file activists to conduct political education at their workplaces. We collaborated with climate justice movements, hosting dozens of events to deepen ties and build connections. In the lead-up to the October 2019 elections, with concerns about a Trump-styled campaign of xenophobia from the Conservatives, we built a cross-country united front to defeat those ideas.

We achieved significant wins: a special permanent residency program for migrant care workers facing deportation due to unfair requirements; the first permanent residency program for migrant agricultural workers (although it is an exclusionary program that shuts out the majority of workers deemed seasonal), and the first open work permit program for migrant workers facing exploitation.

See more here. 

Year 2, 2020: COVID-19 and Launch of Status for All Campaign

2020 was a human rights catastrophe for migrants. We were the front line of the COVID crisis, doing the lowest paid and most dangerous jobs growing and delivering food, cleaning buildings, and taking care of children and the elderly. At the same time, many migrants were excluded from basic healthcare and income support in a pandemic. We grieved as our families around the world suffered the impacts of the coronavirus, exacerbated by vaccine hoarding by countries like Canada.

In 2020, we launched the Status for All campaign, refusing to fight solely for COVID income support, testing, vaccines or emergency changes. Instead, we targeted the root of exploitation: the denial of permanent resident status. While many people “worked from home,” we took to the streets, mobilizing almost every month in massive demonstrations. 

See more here. 

Year 3, 2021: Winning Permanent Resident Status for Working Class Migrants

In 2021, we won a one-time program for permanent residency for almost 90,000 people, some in low-wage sectors. We refocused on family unity, advocating for migrants to have their families join them. Migrant student workers won a one-time renewal to their post-graduate work permits, preventing the deportation of 52,000 people. We organized a mass march on Ottawa, with thousands traveling from across the country to call for permanent resident status for all. In the lead-up to the 2021 elections, we educated voters on issues and persistently followed Liberal MPs on the campaign trail, demanding immigration justice. Shortly after winning the election, on December 16, 2021, less than 18 months after we had launched our Status for All campaign, Prime Minister Trudeau made a mandate letter commitment to ensure permanent resident status for migrant students, workers, and undocumented people.

Read more about 2021 here. 

Year 4, 2022: Regularize Everyone! 

In June 2022, we launched the Regularize Everyone campaign, garnering support from over 500 organizations representing 8 million members to our call for a broad and comprehensive regularization program. The Toronto Star editorial endorsed our position. Following massive demonstrations across the country in the fall, a contingent of over 150 undocumented members from across the country met with then-Immigration Minister Sean Fraser. This historic gathering saw migrants, who live in daily fear of deportation, speaking directly to the Minister, unmasked and unafraid. In April 2022, migrant student workers won another renewal of post-graduate work permits, and in April 2022, they won a temporary end to the 20-hour work limit. Jamaican farm workers spoke up about systematic slavery-like conditions on farms, prompting a fact-finding mission from Jamaica to Canada, the first such visit in over 50 years.

Year 5, 2023: Reuniting Families, Accessing Education, Gaining Ground on Regularization

In 2023, we secured the right for migrants to study without a study permit and the right for some migrant workers to have their families join them. However, the promised expansion of the program to all low-wage workers never materialized. We also won another extension to post-graduate work permits and an extension of waiving the 20-hour work limit for international student workers. The United Nations rapporteur on contemporary forms of slavery came to Canada and reiterated our call for permanent resident status for all. We witnessed a new wave of anti-immigrant hysteria flooding the country, with immigrants being blamed for the housing crisis despite housing prices rising even when Canada closed the border to all migrants and immigrants in 2020. We conducted broad public education pushing back against these lies. As climate change-induced fires struck BC, we supported farmworkers in getting emergency support when all other levels of government failed them.

Other 2023 highlights:

  • We organized a massive demonstration at the winter cabinet retreat in Hamilton in January 2023, on March 18 and 19 we organized demonstrations in 7 cities, as Parliament returned in the Fall, we took to the streets in 15 cities as well as UK, France and Spain on September 18 and 19.
  • Supreme Court rules that Canada owes a “moral debt” to migrants
  • MRN Member Migrant Workers Alliance for Change launched ‘The Secret Menu‘ a guerilla sticker campaign to expose migrant farmworker exploitation

Skyrocketing deportations

Posted on December 7, 2023

Today we exposed a 104% increase in deportations of undocumented people over the last two years following Prime Minister Trudeau’s promise of regularization which would grant permanent resident status to undocumented people. 

We released this information to pressure Prime Minister Trudeau to honour his commitment to ensure permanent resident status for all. We have received multiple assurances from Immigration Ministers that a regularization program is coming. Ripping people away from their communities today who would be regularized tomorrow is absurd and unfair. 

Amplify our findings and demands! Sharing on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. 

Then take two more actions! 

  • Send a handwritten letter to PM Trudeau: www.MigrantRights.ca/Letters
  • Join an action in Montreal, Toronto, Vancouver, Fredericton or Whitehorse or organize an action in your community between December 16 and 18, 2023: www.MigrantRights.ca/Dec

Together, we have been able to stop countless deportations, and we are continuing to fight for a regularization program so that not a single one of us are torn apart from our homes and loved ones here. 

But the numbers are alarming. We found that: 

  • Canada deported 7,032 people in just the first half of 2023, nearly double the deportations in either 2021 or 2022. 
  • Deportations surged by 104% in the first quarter of this year compared to the average of the first-quarter deportations over the previous two years.
  • 39 people were deported every day in the first half of 2023, compared to an average of 21 people per day in 2021.
  • These are just the number of “accompanied” deportations, many other people are coerced to self-deport. 
  • Canada Border Services Agency receives at least a staggering $46 million per year in public money for deportations – which averages out to $4,750 to deport one person. In contrast, providing settlement and integration services for a permanent resident cost a lot less, approximately $3,900.

One of the thousands of people deported is Rajan Gupta, a refugee from India who lived and worked in Montreal for four years. He was a volunteer with the Immigrant Workers Centre, and created theater performances to educate workers about their rights before he was deported in November. 

He said, “During my stay in Canada, I followed all the rules and regulations and I had full faith in the Trudeau government that they would fulfill their promise of regularizing all immigrants but they failed to deliver their promise. Now in India, I can’t go back to my house due to life threats. I am living at an undisclosed place away from my city to save my life along with my sister. I have spent four years of my life working in Canada. Now in India, I have no money or income source and also unable to work outside due to life risks.” 

We started looking for this data because we have been seeing increased enforcement visits, raids, coercion and removals across the country this year. This has created fear and despair in many communities as people anxiously await decisions on their own files and for their loved ones. Increasing deportations while promising regularization makes no sense. 

Most migrant workers, students and refugees in working class jobs are denied permanent residency despite following all the rules and face a dire choice: leave their friends, jobs and communities in Canada and face potential harm or become undocumented, and face exploitation and live in perpetual fear of deportation. 

Right now there are hundreds of thousands of undocumented people fighting for regularization. This includes Tareq Abuznaid is a 19 year old Palestinian who has lived in Canada for eight years and is facing deportation to the West Bank. He said, 

“It feels horrible and it’s honestly heartbreaking that Canada wants to deport me back to a country that is being the victim of an active genocide. Israel doesn’t recognize me as a citizen, and doesn’t even want me on “their land”. It’s so disgusting and shameful that after all we’ve been through, and after all we’ve given, they’re just willing to throw me and my family out into a death sentence. And I know we’re not the only victims of this. I demand that Justin Trudeau should stop all deportations and keep his promise to give permanent residency to all migrant and undocumented people.”

Join us in speaking up today to demand an end to deportation and full and permanent immigration status for all. 

  • Send a handwritten letter: www.MigrantRights.ca/Letters
  • Join or organize an action, December 16 and 18, 2023: www.MigrantRights.ca/Dec

Take Action: Write a letter to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to ensure Status for All

Posted on November 28, 2023

Send a hand-written letter to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau this holiday season to demand permanent resident status for all undocumented people, migrant students and workers. Make sure to send us a photo, too!

Why a hand-written letter: 

  • Hand-written letters are personal and, therefore, more compelling.
  • Many people write letters and postcards during the holidays. 

What should the letter say:

  • Migrants: How will permanent resident status for all change your life?
  • Ally or a supporter: How will permanent resident status for all make life better for everyone in Canada? Learn more here. 
  • Remind the Prime Minister that he promised regularization on December 16, 2021 – almost two years ago! Every day of delay means migrants are abused at work, denied healthcare, and separated from families.

How to send your letter:

  • First, take a photo and send it to letters@migrantrights.ca
    • If you are a migrant, you can also send your letter photo via WhatsApp, get phone numbers here.
  • Then, put it in an envelope and address it to the Office of the Prime Minister, 80 Wellington Street, Ottawa, ON K1A 0A2. It’s free – you don’t need to attach a stamp! 

Fires & Firing: Climate Change, Reprisals & Migrant Fightback

Posted on August 25, 2023

Intense fires are ravaging the country. Thousands have been forced out of their homes. Indigenous communities are particularly impacted.

Similar to the floods in BC in 2021, migrant workers, especially those in the agricultural sector, are once again facing exclusion and exploitation.

Migrant farmworkers without income; forced to work during fires

In the Okanagan Valley of BC, over 600 migrant farmworkers have been displaced. Despite their devastating losses, some employers are refusing to provide income support, leaving these workers dependent on migrant-led organizations such as Sanctuary Health and RAMA for assistance.

Worse still – some of the workers in the fire-affected communities were moved to nearby farms. Their new employers are forcing them to work, even as the air is thick with smoke and temperatures are soaring.

No real protections exist for migrant workers during extreme weather events. Where there are some rules, workers are unable to speak up because employers can fire them, evict them, kick them out of the country and bar them from returning.

This is why you need to join or organize an action on September 16 & 17, 2023 for #StatusForAll

Fired for speaking out

Jamaican farm workers were recently sent home two months early as retaliation from their Ontario employer after a one-day strike protesting appalling housing conditions. These workers had released footage of overflowing bathrooms and their employer berating them.

And just this week in New Brunswick, 25 migrant fishery workers were coerced into signing “resignation letters” two months before their contract will end after organizing a meeting to address insufficient work and income. Please take two minutes and send a message to support them right now!

Climate change is not just fires and extreme weather events

The crisis caused by climate change extends beyond fires and extreme weather. As weather patterns become unpredictable, many migrant workers in food and other seasonal industries are working fewer hours than usual.

The minimum wage they earn in Canada is worth less because the prices of everything have gone up around the world. This year, migrant organizations are distributing emergency aid and food boxes to migrant workers even more than we did during the pandemic.

Rather than ensuring equal rights and permanent residency for all migrants, the federal government has made it even easier for employers to hire more workers on a precarious basis.

We need justice and status for all

This open season for exploitation is a response from the federal government to the employer push for more precarious workers to fill what they insist is a labour shortage. But we know the real issue is lack of worker rights, not a lack of workers. Even as employers and bosses are pushing for more precarious workers, they are also blaming immigrants for the increase in housing prices.

Over the last few weeks, big business supporting voice in the media have been loudly complaining about too many immigrants causing the housing crunch. Their main argument is that there are too many newcomers, and so Canada needs to build new homes and/or reduce the number of people. But focusing on housing supply, instead of investor profiteering, is just a way for those who are making the big bucks from construction and development to continue to do so.

The facts reveal a different story. In 2020, immigration in Canada fell as the borders were closed. But housing prices still skyrocketed! [9]

Help us push back against misinformation blaming immigrants for the housing crisis.

Share this graphic of Facebook, Twitter and Instagram, and download and share with your friends.

Some amazing news: Organizing and speaking up works!

Migrant farmworker Kerian Burnett won temporary access to healthcare after she joined with No One Is Illegal Halifax. Migrante Canada chairperson Danilo De Leon won a stop to his deportation and will likely get permanent resident status!

September 17: Let’s get it done

Posted on July 17, 2023

Actions across the country to win regularization and Status for All

Act Now: Let’s win Regularization!

Posted on April 27, 2023

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his 38 Cabinet Ministers will be discussing regularization sometime before the session ends on June 23rd (not June 9). They can either make a decision immediately, or continue to delay. They can create a small and exclusionary program for just a few or ensure permanent resident status for all undocumented people.

Together, let’s make sure they do the right thing and ensure status for all. 

(1)  Visit MP & Cabinet offices
(2) Call the Cabinet Ministers everyday
(3) Send emails, write letters and deliver petitions to Cabinet Ministers.

Over the next few weeks, we must push as hard as we can, get as loud as we can to make sure that Cabinet Ministers create a program to ensure permanent resident status for all undocumented people. But if they choose to delay, we won’t stop, let’s keep up the pressure over the summer and beyond to win. 


(1) Visit MP and Cabinet Offices

Print and display these impactful posters at your nearest MP’s office. Let’s ensure our message cannot be ignored. Find your local MP and their office [here], and download our posters [here]. Email photos of posters to info@migrantrights.ca or post on social media with #StatusForAll.

If you’re near a Cabinet Minister, deliver a letter and our brief. Here’s how:

Step 1: Find the closest constituency office near you.

Step 2: Check online using Google to see when they are open. Constituency offices are usually open to the public between 10am to 4pm, Monday – Thursday, but make sure to confirm. Pick a time that you can go and invite friends to come with you if you can. Let us know when you are going so we can encourage those nearby to join you, email us at info@migrantrights.ca. 

Step 3: Print out these three documents:

  • Personalize this letter and print it out
  • Regularization Policy brief
  • Cabinet Minister posters (to take photos with and put on the doors outside) 

Step 4: Go to the Constituency Office. When you arrive, tell them you are a local resident and there to speak about regularization. Ask the staff to pass on the message to the Cabinet Minister that local residents and voters support an inclusive regularization program that grants permanent resident status to all undocumented people. Ask for the contact information of the person you spoke to, and tell them you will be calling to ask what the Minister said. If you don’t feel comfortable talking, you can also just give them the letter and the policy brief. Make sure to put up some posters outside. Watch a simple video tutorial [here].

Step 5: A few days later, call the office to ask if they passed on your message to the Minister.

Step 6: Email us and let us know what happened – info@migrantrights.ca


(2) Call the Cabinet Ministers everyday

Call as many of the Cabinet Ministers as you can, starting with Prime Minister Trudeau, and then Ministers in the province you are in. Two ways to call: 

Call Directly From Your Phone:  Click here for their phone numbers and a script. 

Call Using Our Automated Caller: Enter your information below and click Make the Call. Our system will dial a Cabinet Minister. You can leave message for one Minister or stay on the line, and the system will move to the next Minister when you’re done. A phone script will appear on the next page. 

 


(3) Send emails, write letters, and deliver petitions to Cabinet Ministers.

Every time you or a friend adds their name here: www.StatusForAll.ca; an email is automatically sent to all Cabinet Ministers. The more emails they receive, the more they know this is an issue they need to act on.

You can also gather paper petition signatures. Download them from here, print, and take them to your community events, when you go for religious service, or a picnic, or outside a local transit hub. You can do it on your own or with friends, simply take a clipboard and pen.

  • Download and print legal sized petition
  • Download and print regular 8.5 x 11 sized petition
  • Once you’ve gathered signatures, click here to share them with us.

If you would like to send an email yourself, use the template email here, and get their contact email addresses here. Letters can be individual or organizational. Even if you’ve written an organizational letter, please send another one. 

 

What is the STCA?

Posted on March 26, 2023

A sudden extension: Without any warning, at 12:01am on March 24th, the Safe Third Country Agreement (STCA) was extended to cover the entire 9,000 kilometer border between the US and Canada.

Deportation without any process: Under the STCA, any migrant caught crossing on foot or via waterway without a visa can be deported without any processing. Those who were coming via Roxham Road in Quebec are now being deported.

Refugee applicants caught within 14 days can be deported: Any refugee claimant in Canada who arrived from the US must now prove that they were in Canada for 14 consecutive days to be eligible to apply. If they can’t, they will be deported without processing. There are a few exceptions.

Migrants are in crisis now on the US side of the border: Migrants coming over to Canada on foot are now being arrested, and those that don’t meet the exceptions are being handed over to US border officials who either jail them or are dropping them off in Plattsburgh New York. Most have nowhere to go to, having spent all their savings to come to the border. Despite sub-zero weather, many don’t even have winter clothes.

While the extension is new, the STCA is not: The STCA was created in December 2004. Until this weekend, it only applied to “official” crossings, which meant that refugees that walked across the border from any other area could still apply for refugee status. The most common route in recent years was Roxham Road in Quebec.

The US is not safe for refugees: The STCA was created under the premise that refugees arriving in Canada or the US should apply for refugee status in the first “safe country” they arrive in. Except, the US is also not safe for all refugees. In 2022, the acceptance rate for Haitian refugees in the US was 8%; and for Mexico was 5%. Refugees are routinely criminalized, children jailed, and it takes years to get a decision.

Migrants were already dying: Because of the STCA, many people were already taking dangerous journeys in both directions. In the last few months, two migrants, Fritznel Richard and Jose Leos Cervantes died crossing into the US on foot from Canada. 

This extension of STCA means more suffering: Now with the STCA extended to the entire border, migrants will choose even more remote and difficult terrain to cross to avoid detection. As a result, many more will die. The 14 day rule means that refugee claimants that do cross over will go into hiding for two weeks, during which time they will likely be exploited and abused. 

Prime Minister Trudeau caved to racism: Even though it was announced on Friday, the STCA extension was negotiated in secret over a year ago. It came as a response to increased anti-refugee demands from racist politicians. Depending on which government source you believe, there were between 20,000 and 40,000 refugees, almost all of whom were racialized, who crossed on foot into Canada from the US in 2022. In that time period, over half a million Ukranians, almost all white, were issued permits to come to Canada without any of the backlash. 

Migrants are not the crisis, the super rich are: Migrants including refugees are being blamed for using healthcare services and taking up housing to distract us all from the big businesses who are jacking up prices, pushing to privatize healthcare and gambling with housing prices.

But it’s not over yet. The Supreme Court of Canada will soon to issue its decision on whether the STCA is legal. Even if they do vote in favour of it, migrants and refugees will continue to take whatever steps they need to travel for safety and dignity. And as migrant movements, we will do everything in our power to support them. We must continue to oppose war, climate inaction, and economic oppression in the Global South that Canada profits from, and which forces people to migrate.

We must continue to fight for Status For All: We need to continue to take action for rights and dignity for all migrants, and to demand permanent resident status for all because it is the only way to access rights and power. Right now, we are taking action for:

  • Undocumented migrants to be regularized without exception. We want an uncapped program that grants permanent resident status to all undocumented people without exception. We need to commit to doing whatever is necessary to make sure no one is left out.
  • Migrant workers including care workers, farmworkers, fishery workers to be granted permanent resident status, and be united with their families without unfair education accreditation and language testing requirements. All migrant workers must have permanent resident status, rights at work and at housing, without exception including seasonal workers. 
  • Migrant student workers to get fairness at school, at work, and to be able to get permanent resident status without exclusions.

Day of Action: #UniteAgainstRacism #RefugeesWelcome #StatusForAll

Posted on March 6, 2023

Take action on March 18 and 19, 2023 across the country.

The Manufactured Crisis About Refugees Coming in Via Quebec

Posted on February 23, 2023

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre and Quebec Premier Legault are calling on Prime Minister Trudeau to close Roxham Road. Refugees are being shipped out of Quebec. Over in Niagara Falls, the Mayor is complaining about refugee children taking up space in school. Many people are talking about refugees taking up services and jobs. 

This is strategic racism and it must be understood and opposed as such. 

Join or organize actions across the country on March 18 & 19. 

Say it loud, say clear: Refugees Welcome! Status for All Now! 

Politics of Hate, Fear and Division

Because of our collective action, permanent resident status for over half a million undocumented people is concretely possible. Federal pharmacare, childcare and dental care programs are on the horizon. Where workers are fighting collectively, wages are increasing. At the same time, many of us are angry because corporations are getting rich while the rest of us are struggling to pay the bills. In times like these, racism and anti-immigrant hysteria is a strategy of the rich to distract us and divide us, and it has deadly consequences. Once again, we must act firmly, and unite against racism. 

Nothing exceptional about refugees crossing at Roxham Road 

Refugees are making the dangerous crossing from the US on foot, primarily near Roxham Road in Quebec because Canada and the United States have closed regular border crossings to refugees through the Safe Third Country Agreement. As soon as they enter Canada, they are registered, and apply for refugee status. A hearing is scheduled where a Board Member (not a judge or a lawyer) decides whether to grant them refugee status. 60% of the asylum seekers who crossed via Roxham Road and have had a hearing were granted refugee status. That is the exact same acceptance rate as applicants who come through other ways. 

We cross the border for safety 

The US refugee determination system is in some ways even worse than Canada’s. 73% of refugee applicants were rejected in the USA under President Trump. Under President Biden, 63% are being rejected. As in Canada, refugees in the US are abused, separated from children, mistreated, denied services, imprisoned and deported. When the US is not safe, people cross over to Canada for asylum. Similarly, when Canada is not safe, they cross into the US.

39,000 refugee claimants is not a crisis

Only 39,171 refugee claimants crossed into Quebec from the US in 2022. That’s about 3% of the 1.2 million temporary residents that came into Canada the same year; or 0.09% of Canada’s total population. Compare 39,000 to 559,868 refugees from Ukraine over the last year who get many of the same services, without any of the demands by politicians to close the border to them. The call to close Roxham Road is a cynical attempt by politicans to distract us from our low-wages and exploitation. Just like their Trump counterparts in the United States.

Refugees are dying crossing the border

Fritznel Richard froze to death leaving Canada on foot to reunite with his family for Christmas. The entire Patel family froze to death going to the US. If Roxham Road is entirely closed, migrants will continue to try to travel, through even more unsafe ways, and even more will die. We need to create more safe paths for refugees, not less. 

Underfunding of healthcare, schools and services are to blame 

12 billion dollars were cut from schools in Ontario under Ford, it’s not refugee children who are taking up spaces. The crisis in healthcare is a result of under-funding, lack of support for healthcare workers and a push towards privatization. A few thousand refugee claimants are not overrunning the system. Rather refugees use less healthcare and social services than citizens. 

Home prices are artificially inflated, food prices are rising, wages stay the same

Over 235,000 people go without shelter in Canada each year. But billionaire developers are creating housing for investments and profit, not people. Up to 40% of housing is now controlled by investors. Food prices have been increased astronomically by large grocery stores but wages lag far behind inflation. We are all struggling to find housing, and it’s certainly not because of those of us who are refugees or immigrants. 

Unite Against Racism and Bosses and Win Status For All!

The most effective opposition to racist division is to push forward a pro-immigrant united agenda. The struggle for status for all is a struggle against exploitation of all workers by wealthy bosses. More than ever, now is the time to call for permanent resident status for all migrants, including undocumented people, all refused refugees, and temporary workers. Reject racist tricks to divide and silence us in our just demands. 

Now is the time to speak to your friends and family members and invite them to join in the struggle by asking them to sign on at www.StatusForAll.ca and come out on 18 & 19 March, 2023. 

December 2022: Let’s get 14 Cabinet Ministers to Support Status for All

Posted on December 1, 2022

14 federal Ministers in the Cabinet Committee on Economy, Inclusion and Climate “B” are set to debate regularization – permanent resident status for undocumented people – sometime in December. They will decide who and how many people will be included, before sending their proposal to all Ministers (the whole of Cabinet) early next year.

We need these 14 Ministers – and especially Prime Minister Trudeau – to support an uncapped program through which all undocumented people and their families can apply for permanent residency immediately. We need them to oppose any exclusions, or a program that gives just temporary status.  And we need them to support permanent resident status for all 1.7 million migrants. 

We can do this! Here’s how:

(1) Send emails: Nearly 22,000 people have already sent messages to Cabinet Ministers. Please keep signing and sharing: www.StatusForAll.ca. We have heard from many Ministers that they are paying attention.

(2) Put up posters:  Go and put up a poster on their windows and around the offices. Addresses are listed below.
>> Download posters here
>> Make sure to take a photo when you put it up and send it to use either tagging @MigrantRightsCA on social media or via email to info@migrantrights.ca

(3) Send organizational letters: f you are part of a group or organization, use this template to send a letter to all Cabinet Ministers. Click here for template letter

(4) Leave a phone message: Use this tool to leave a phone message to as many of the 14 Ministers as you can. 

(5) Take Action on December 16-19: Actions are taking place in Toronto, Montreal, Shediac, Vancouver and Alberta. Click here for details.


Cabinet Committee on Economy, Inclusion and Climate “B” 

Ontario
>> Hon. Ahmed Hussen – 613-995-0777 – Ahmed.Hussen@parl.gc.ca – 48 Rosemount Avenue, Unit B, York, Ontario, M9N 3B3
>> Hon. Carolyn Bennett – 613-995-9666 – carolyn.bennett@parl.gc.ca – 103-40 Holly Street, Toronto, Ontario M4S 3C3
>> Hon. Mark Holland – 613-995-8042 – mark.holland@parl.gc.ca – 100 Old Kingston Road, Ajax, Ontario, L1T 2Z9
>> Hon.Mary Ng – 613-996-3374 – Mary.Ng@parl.gc.ca – 16 Esna Park Drive, Markham, Ontario L3R 5X1

Quebec
>> Hon. Diane-Lebouthillier – 613-992-6188 – Diane.Lebouthillier@parl.gc.ca – 153 La Grande Allée East, Suite 104, Grande-Rivière, Quebec, G0C 1V0
>> Hon. François-Philippe Champagne – 613-995-4895 – Francois-Philippe.Champagne@parl.gc.ca – 632 Grand-Mère Avenue, Suite 1, Shawinigan, Quebec, G9T 2H5
>> Hon. Marc Miller – 613-995-6403 – Marc.Miller@parl.gc.ca – 3175 Saint-Jacques Street, Montréal, Quebec H4C 1G7
>> Hon. Pascale St-Onge – 613-947-8185 – pascale.st-onge@parl.gc.ca – 301-145 Rue de Sherbrooke, Cowansville, Quebec, J2K 5E7
>> Hon. Steven Guilbeault – 613-992-6779 – Steven.Guilbeault@parl.gc.ca – 800 Boul de Maisonneuve E, Suite 1010, Montréal, Quebec, H2L 4L8

British Columbia
>> Hon. Joyce Murray – 613-992-2430 – joyce.murray@parl.gc.ca  – 2112, West Broadway, Suite 206, Vancouver, British Columbia, V6K 2C8

Alberta
>> Hon.Randy Boissonnault – 613-992-4524 – randy.boissonnault@parl.gc.ca – 202-10235, 124 St NW, Edmonton, Alberta, T5N 1P9

Atlantic Canada
>> Hon. Dominic LeBlanc –  613-992-1020  – dominic.leblanc@parl.gc.ca – 328 Main Street, Suite I, Shediac, New Brunswick, E4P 2E3
>> Hon. Gudie-Hutchings – 613-996-5511 – gudie.hutchings@parl.gc.ca – 49-51 Park Street, Corner Brook, Newfoundland and Labrador, A2H 2X1
>> Hon. Sean Fraser – 613-992-6022 – minister@cic.gc.ca – 2A – 115 MacLean Street, New Glasgow, Nova Scotia, B2H 4M5


Message to send to your email lists

Because of migrant organizing, Prime Minister Trudeau instructed the federal Minister of Immigration to create a “regularization program”, which means giving permanent resident status to undocumented migrants (people without a valid permit to live in Canada). He also promised to ensure permanent resident status for migrant students and workers. 

We now have a historic opportunity to push for equality for all migrants, including undocumented people. The details of the final program are being debated in a federal Cabinet sub-committee right now, and will be sent to the whole of Cabinet soon after. This is the time to speak up and to make sure that no one is left behind.

Collective action has brought us this far. We are at the brink of winning equal rights for over a half million racialized working class people and their families. However, there are many forces, including big business lobbyists, pushing to make these programs as small and exclusionary as possible so that they can continue to profit from migrant worker precarity. 

Send a message to everyone in Cabinet letting them know that you believe in equality, rights, dignity and justice for all: www.StatusforAll.ca 

Oct 16: Tell Cabinet To Ensure #StatusforAll Without Delay

Posted on October 5, 2022

On October 16th, it will be 10 months since Prime Minister Trudeau promised a regularization program! Join us to call on Ministers across Canada to move swiftly to ensure regularization for undocumented migrants and permanent resident status for all.

Thousands on the street .. What’s next?

Posted on September 21, 2022

Over 5,000 people rallied, marched, and met in 13 cities. Many of us braved heavy rain and lightning knowing that our collective action was essential to achieve status for all. 

Even with the almost blanket media coverage of a funeral in England, we captured media attention. Dozens of outlets, including radio, TV and print, carried our message of full immigration status for all undocumented people, as well as all other migrant workers, student and families to millions of households. 

This action is not a one-off. We must keep moving.  

Step 1: Get the news out wider this week

Parliament is back, and our efforts must now kick into high gear. Many politicians have not been around over the summer, and now is the time to get their attention. There are a few ways to do this. 

First is to share photos and videos from September 18. 

Share photos on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram

The second is sharing news articles. Nowadays, the more a news story link is clicked, the more it is shown to other readers. So, click each of these links and share as many as you can: Canadian Press, CBC National News Network, Le Devoir, La Presse, CTV Vancouver, CBC Toronto, Radio Canada Vancouver, Omni Filipino – Ottawa. 

We have also created a playlist of all the TV coverage here. Watch and listen to hear migrants explain directly what they are facing.

Step 2: New this week: Understanding the response to M-44

Back in May, Parliament unanimously passed a symbolic motion (M-44) asking Immigration Minister Fraser to share a plan to ensure permanent resident status for workers of all skill levels. Yesterday, the immigration department submitted a 40-page report in response. 

This report focuses on possible changes for farmworkers, care workers, migrant students and other migrant workers – but there are no details. It is separate from the regularization program that Minister Fraser is already in the process of developing for undocumented migrants (people who have already lost their status), which is moving ahead more quickly and we must keep up the pressure.

The M-44 report does two things: It re-announces changes already made, and it says that the government is reviewing the immigration system and may potentially make other changes in the future. 

The lack of real change is frustrating. At the same time, it is our collective action that has forced the government to review the immigration system and it is up to us to make sure that we win status for all.

If you are a migrant, and are not already part of an organization, email us at info@migrantrights.ca and we will connect you to others like you.  

Step 3: The fight ahead

In the weeks and months ahead, we will continue to share updates about the fight for the rights of temporary migrant workers and students. 

Right now we need to continue to fight for permanent residency for half a million undocumented people. Here’s what will happen next:

[A] Government Action: Soon the Minister of Immigration (elected) and the Department of Immigration (the bureaucrats) will write a “Memo to Cabinet” (MC). In it they will propose which and how many undocumented people should be given PR
Our Response: RIGHT NOW: We must sign petitions, make phone calls, and ask organizations to write letters to ensure that there is no delay, and that everyone is included. Educators: Add your name here; Healthcare workers: Add your name here. 

[B] Government Action: Once the MC is finalized, it is submitted to one of the Cabinet Sub-Committees for review.  
Our Response: Once we know which Cabinet Committee will receive the proposal, we will make sure that those Ministers hear from us. 

[C] Government Action: The Cabinet Sub-Committee will send the proposal to the whole Cabinet.
Our Response: We will organize visits, rallies and calls to all members of the Cabinet. 

[D] Government Action: Once Cabinet decides, the Immigration Department will create the application forms and other guides.
Our Response: We will keep up the pressure to make sure there is no delay

[E] Government Action: Once the Immigration Department has finalized its plan, the program will finally be announced.
Our Response: We will celebrate, and demand changes if anyone is left out

[F] Government Action: The program will be launched
Our Response: We will together make sure that all undocumented people can apply while campaigning to expand the program if it is exclusionary.

As you can see, we don’t have timelines listed. We have learned from COVID-19, and the war in Ukraine that when the government wants to move quickly, it will. Our actions will determine how quickly we can win status for all.

September 18 Endorsers / Appuyé par les organisations suivantes : 350.org Canada, Access Alliance Multicultural Health and Community Services, Action Canada for Sexual Health and Rights, Anglican Diocese of Toronto, Apatrides anonymes, Atlantic Regional Solidarity Network (ARSN), Black Lives Matter – Canada, Canada Without Poverty, Broadbent Institute, Canadian Federation of Students – Ontario, Canadian Federation of Students – National, Canadian Union of Postal Workers, Canadian Initiative on Workplace Violence Ltd., Canadian Refugee Health Network, Canadian Women’s Foundation, Centre d’aide aux familles latino américaines (CAFLA), Centre des femmes de Laval, Centre international de solidarité ouvrière (CISO), Citizens for Public Justice, Climate Action Network – CAN-RAC, Coalition étudiante pour un virage environnemental et social (CEVES), ClimateFast, Collectif Bienvenue // Welcome Collective, Community Solidarity Ottawa, Council of Canadians, Le Conseil Des Canadiens, CUPE Local 3902, CUPE Ontario, Davenport Perth Neighbourhood and Community Health Centre, David Suzuki Foundation, Earth Education League, ETFO / PETL, Fédération des femmes du Québec, FoodShare Toronto, Front d’action populaire en réaménagement urbain (FRAPRU) Foyer du Monde, Global Peace Alliance Society, Hamilton Social Medicine Response Team (HAMSMaRT), HIV Legal Network,  Hogan’s Alley Society, Hospital Employees’ Union, Indigenous Climate Action, Inter Pares, Italian-Canadians for Black Lives, Jasper Employment & Education Centre, Jesuit Refugee Service Canada, Justice For All Canada, Justice for Workers, KAIROS Toronto West, Leadnow, Legal Clinic of Guelph & Wellington County, Mary Ward Centre – Toronto, Médecins du Monde / Doctors of the World, Migrant Action Centre, Migrant Worker Community Program, La Ligue des droits et libertés, Médecins du monde Mouvement contre le viol et l’inceste, National Union of Public and General Employees, Neighbourhood Legal Services, Niagara Community Legal Clinic, Oasis Dufferin Community Centre, Ontario Coalition Against Poverty (OCAP), Ontario Federation of Labour, Ontario Nurses’ Association, Ontario Parent Action Network, Ontario Nurses’ Association, OPIRG Carleton, Ottawa and District Labour Council, Our Lady of Guadalupe Tonantzin,  Community, Oxfam Canada, Parkdale Queen West Community Health Centre, Romero House, SEIU – Local 2, Showing up for Racial Justice – Toronto, Social Justice Co-op NL, Sudbury Workers Education and Advocacy Centre, SWAN Vancouver, SURJ XYE, The Caring for Social Justice Collective-Le Collectif Soignons la justice sociale, Toronto350, The Neighbourhood Group, United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW Canada), Vancouver and District Labour Council, Water Watchers, Workers Solidarity Network, West Coast LEAF, YWCA, YWCA Toronto. Please endorse this action/Veuillez SVP endosser cette action.

 

Massive Day of Action on September 18

Posted on September 12, 2022

One day before Parliament returns – we are taking actions across the country. Find an action near you or join in.

Organizational Letters of Support for Regularization & #StatusforAll

Posted on August 28, 2022

Major organizations across the country are writing letters to Prime Minister Trudeau and Immigration Minister Sean Fraser supporting regularization and Status for All.

If you haven’t yet, please do so using our template letters for Environmental organizations, Labour organizations and all other civil society organizations.

Educators can sign this letter and Healthcare workers can sign this letter too.

Letters of Support for Regularization and #StatusForAll

  • 350 Canada
  • Access Alliance Multicultural Health & Community Services
  • Action Canada for Sexual Health and Rights 
  • ACTRA
  • Alchemy Pickle Company
  • Association for the Rights of Household and Farm Workers
  • Canada Without Poverty
  • Canadian Centre for Victims of Torture
  • Canadian Federation of Students – Ontario
  • Canadian Health Coalition
  • Canadian Initiative on Workplace Violence
  • Canadian Labour Congress
  • Canadian Union of Postal Workers
  • Canadian Union of Public Employees
  • Canadian Union of Public Employees – Manitoba
  • Canadian Union of Public Employees – Nova Scotia
  • Canadian Women’s Foundation
  • Citizens for Public Justice
  • Climate Action Network + Blue Green + Canada Canadian Interfaith Fast For the Climate + Canadian Voice of Women for Peace + Citizens for Public Justice + Environmental Defence + Foire ÉCOSPHÈRE + Fondation David Suzuki + Greenpeace Canada + Leadnow + MiningWatch + Travailleuses et Travailleurs pour la Justice Climatique + West Coast Environmental Law Association + Others
  • Climate Justice Toronto
  • Community & Legal Aid Services Program
  • CUPE 3902
  • CUPE Ontario
  • Decent Work and Health Network
  • Family Service Toronto and Campaign 2000
  • Fédération du travail de l’Ontario | Ontario Federation of Labour
  • Food Secure Canada
  • FoodShare
  • Hamilton Community Legal Clinic
  • HIV Legal Network
  • Inter Clinic Immigration Working Group
  • Interfaith Social Assistance Reform Coalition
  • Kitchener-Waterloo Multicultural Centre
  • La Passerelle-I.D.E
  • Madhu Verma Migrant Justice Centre
  • Manitoba Federation of Labour
  • Médecins du Monde
  • National Farmers Foundation
  • National Union of Public and General Employees
  • Neighbourhood Legal Services
  • Occupational Health Centre – Manitoba
  • Ontario Council of Agencies Serving Immigrants
  • Ontario Nurses’ Association
  • Ontario Parent Action Network
  • Ontario Public Services Employees Union
  • Ontario Secondary School Teachers’ Federation
  • Oxfam Canada & Oxfam Quebec
  • Resource Movement
  • SEIU Local 2
  • South Asian Legal Clinic of Ontario
  • Sudbury Workers Education & Advocacy Centre
  • SURJ YXE
  • The 519
  • UNIFOR
  • United Church of Canada
  • Welcome Collective
  • Wilderness Committee
  • Worker Solidarity Network

July 17: Actions across Canada to win #StatusforAll

Posted on July 28, 2022

On July 17, 2022, over a thousand people marched in the streets of Montreal; migrant families held meetings in Vancouver, and postering, leafletting and flyering actions took place in Edmonton, Toronto and St Catharines.

https://migrantrights.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/J17-1.mp4

Caregiver Online Mother’s Day Rally with Special Guests

Posted on April 20, 2022

Migrant Caregivers: Join our online Mother’s Day rally to talk about the long years of family separation, difficulties that we face while working in Canada, challenges in applying for permanent residency and the impact of the backlog.

Migrants: Share your opinions

Posted on April 11, 2022

Fill out this short survey to share your experiences and priorities.

UNITE AGAINST RACISM: MARCH, RUN, WALK, DANCE FOR STATUS FOR ALL!

Posted on February 28, 2022

1.6 for 1.6 million excluded migrants – On your own, or in groups, march for 1.6 km, go for a 1.6 km bike ride, post a video of you dancing for 1.6 minutes, make a 1.6 feet drawing or get even more creative. 

Townhall: Migrants in Crisis! Migrants in Action

Posted on January 19, 2022

Welcome! Scroll below to stream the online rally!

  1. CLICK HERE: Sign up to put up posters at MP offices and in your neighbourhood!
  2. CLICK HERE: Make a call for Status for All to Prime Minister Trudeau and your Member of Parliament

Home Stretch: Let’s get #StatusForAll on the Cabinet Retreat Agenda

Posted on January 16, 2022

Prime Minister Trudeau and all federal Ministers are meeting in Hamilton from January 23rd to 25th to plan out their priorities for the year. If you act now, we can win historic immigration changes. If all the Ministers at the meeting support regularization, then Cabinet can schedule a meeting soon after to create an uncapped program through which all undocumented people and their families can apply for permanent residence as early as February. If the Ministers aren’t in full support next week then they will schedule more meetings for discussion. Delays mean exploitation, deportation and even death. Two migrants died this Christmas – an undocumented migrant in immigration prison in BC, and Fritznel Richard, a Haitian refugee crossing into the US after being unable to get a work permit in Montreal. Let’s win #StatusForAll and an end to detentions and deportations. 

Week of Action – Now to January 25, 2023:

(1) Send emails: Over 23,000 people have already sent messages to all Cabinet Ministers. Please keep signing and sharing: www.StatusForAll.ca. We have heard from many Ministers that they are paying attention.

(2) Put up posters:  If you are near a Cabinet Minister’s office, please put up a poster on their windows and around the offices. Addresses are in the map below.
>> Download posters here
>> Make sure to take a photo when you put it up and send it to use either tagging @MigrantRightsCA on social media or via email to info@migrantrights.ca

(3) Leave a phone message: Use the phone numbers to call and leave this message: “Dear Minister, please support regularization for all undocumented people and permanent resident status for all migrants at the winter cabinet retreat.  We need an uncapped program that leaves no one behind. A fair society means equal rights, and that’s only possible with permanent resident status for all, no deportations, no exclusions.” 

(4) Join us in Hamilton at 12pm on Monday, January 23rd at the Winter Cabinet Retreat: Buses are leaving from Toronto. RSVP now!


Call a Federal Cabinet Minister nearest to you and ask them to Regularize Everyone, and Ensure #StatusForAll

  • Prime Minister Justin Trudeau – 613–992–4211
  • Randy Boissonnault – Minister of Tourism – 613 – 992 – 4524 – Edmonton – Alberta
  • Carla Qualtrough – Minister of Employment, Workforce Development and Disability Inclusion – 613 – 992 – 2957 – Delta – British Columbia
  • Harjit S. Sajjan – Minister of International Development – 613 – 995 – 7052 – Vancouver – British Columbia
  • Jonathan Wilkinson – Minister of Natural Resources – 613 – 995 – 1225 – North Vancouver – British Columbia
  • Joyce Murray – Minister of Fisheries, Oceans and the Canadian Coast Guard – 613 – 992 – 2430 – Vancouver – British Columbia
  • Dan Vandal – Minister responsible for Prairies Economic Development Canada – 613 – 995 – 0579 – Winnipeg – Manitoba
  • Dominic LeBlanc – Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs, Infrastructure and Communities – 613 – 992 – 1020 – Shediac – New Brunswick
  • Ginette Petitpas Taylor – Minister of Official Languages – 613 – 992 – 8072 – Moncton – New Brunswick
  • Gudie Hutchings – Minister of Rural Economic Development – 613 – 996 – 5511 – Corner Brook – Newfoundland and Labrador
  • Seamus O’Regan – Minister of Labour – 613 – 992 – 0927 – St. John’s,  – Newfoundland and Labrador
  • Sean Fraser – Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship – 613 – 992 – 6022 – New Glasgow – Nova Scotia
  • Ahmed Hussen – Minister of Housing and Diversity and Inclusion – 613 – 995 – 0777 – York – Ontario
  • Anita Anand – Minister of National Defence – 613 – 995 – 4014 – Oakville – Ontario
  • Bill Blair – President of the Queen’s Privy Council for Canada – 613 – 995 – 0284 – Scarborough – Ontario
  • Carolyn Bennett – Minister of Mental Health and Addictions – 613 – 995 – 9666 – Toronto – Ontario
  • Chrystia Freeland – Minister of Finance – 613 – 992 – 5234 – Toronto – Ontario
  • Filomena Tassi – Minister responsible for the Federal Economic Development Agency for Southern Ontario – 613 – 992 – 1034 – Hamilton – Ontario
  • Helena Jaczek – Minister of Public Services and Procurement – 613 – 992 – 3640 – Markham – Ontario
  • Kamal Khera – Minister of Seniors – 613 – 992 – 0778 – Brampton – Ontario
  • Karina Gould – Minister of Families, Children and Social Development – 613 – 995 – 0881 – Burlington – Ontario
  • Marci Ien – Minister for Women and Gender Equality and Youth – 613 – 992 – 1377 – Toronto – Ontario
  • Mark Holland – Leader of the Government in the House of Commons – 613 – 995 – 8042 – Kingston – Ontario
  • Mary Ng – Minister of International Trade, Export Promotion, Small Business and Economic Development – 613 – 996 – 3374 – Markham – Ontario
  • Mona Fortier – President of the Treasury Board – 613 – 992 – 4766 – Vanier – Ontario
  • Omar Alghabra – Minister of Transport – 613 – 992 – 1301 – Mississauga – Ontario
  • Patty Hajdu – Minister of Indigenous Services – 613 – 996 – 4792 – Thunderbay – Ontario
  • Marco Mendicino – Minister of Public Safety – 613 – 992 – 6361 – Toronto – Ontario
  • Lawrence MacAulay – Minister of Veterans Affairs – 613 – 995 – 9325 – Montague – Prince Edward Island
  • David Lametti – Minister of Justice – 613 – 943 – 6636 – Montréal – Quebec
  • Diane Lebouthillier – Minister of National Revenue – 613 – 992 – 6188 – Grande – Rivière – Quebec
  • François – Philippe Champagne – Minister of Innovation, Science and Industry – 613 – 995 – 4895 – Shawinigan – Quebec
  • Jean – Yves Duclos – Minister of Health – 613 – 992 – 8865 – Québec – Quebec

 

What we did, what we will do – Intl Migrants Day 2021

Posted on December 18, 2021


This morning, students, teachers and migrants will rally at an elementary school in New Westminster, BC, where immigration enforcement stalked and arrested an undocumented mother after she dropped her daughter there.

Today is International Migrants Day, and this action shines a light on the injustices here in Canada and the courage and resilience of migrants.

Hundreds of thousands of migrants do not have basic rights to education, healthcare and labour protections. For many of us, accessing the few rights we do have can mean detention and deportation.

Yet despite this injustice, every morning, we wake up and go to school, go to work, care for our loved ones, and are active in our communities.

And so on this International Migrants Day, we reiterate our commitment to survive and thrive, no matter what the odds.

PM Trudeau just released a letter outlining his priorities for the immigration system. These priorities include the possibility of more access to permanent residency for low-wage and racialized migrants, and a continued expansion of temporariness and precariousness for many.

We are the ones that know what changes are needed. Promises have been made and broken before, so in 2022, Migrant Rights Network members will continue to organize migrants, and unite with allies to win fairness, equal rights and justice for all. We will win Status for All!

When migrants organize, and join with our supporters, we win. In 2021:

  • Migrants fought for safe and dignified access to vaccines, and province by province together we changed the rules that were shutting us out;
  • Many migrant farm workers died in quarantine, and faced on-going violations of their rights at work, but they spoke up, reminding us that they feed us and demanding decent housing, equal rights, and justice. Hear from farm workers directly here;
  • Migrant care workers organized against the backlog in processing PR applications and won a commitment to have it cleared; 
  • Immigration detainees organized hunger strikes and fought for their release;
  • Migrant student workers won a one-time renewal to the work permit program and stopped the deportation of 52,000 people;
  • Because migrants organized, the government created a temporary program to give 90,000 workers in some low-wage sectors access to permanent residency, recognizing that only PR can give migrants access to equal rights. But still this policy leaves too many people out; 
  • On June 20th, in actions across the country, we demanded families unity and all migrants be welcomed;
  • In July, a thousand of us marched through Ottawa to the Prime Minister’s office and Parliament Hill to insist that #StatusForAll is necessary, urgent, and possible;
  • In the lead up to the September federal election, migrants spoke to voters to explain why it was so important to vote for #StatusForAll;
  • When the floods displaced migrant farmworkers in BC, hundreds of you donated thousands of dollars to support them; 
  • And to close out the year, migrants visited MP offices across the country in December to tell the new Trudeau government that we live here and the crisis we are facing demands action now.

Our demand for full and permanent immigration status for all is not just about accessing rights here in Canada – it is about challenging the idea that people can be exploited and pitted against each other. It is a call for unity, here and everywhere.

We have done so much together. And in 2022, we must do more. Join us.

Migrants Visit MPs: We Live Here! The Crisis is Now!

Posted on November 22, 2021

Last weekend, migrants and supporters delivered our message to MPs & officials across Canada. From BC to Newfoundland, we insisted that We Live Here, and our Crisis is Now.

https://migrantrights.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/Dec-MP-visits-1.mp4

 

What you can do

  1. Call your MP: Leave a message for your new Member of Parliament telling them that they must ensure permanent resident status for all: https://migrantrights.ca/callforstatus/

 

Migrants Mandate Letter to Federal Cabinet

Posted on October 29, 2021

The Right Honourable Justin Trudeau, P.C., M.P., Prime Minister of Canada, Ottawa
The Honourable Sean Fraser, Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship
The Honourable Carla Qualtrough, Minister of Employment, Workforce Development and Disability Inclusion
The Honourable Jean-Yves Duclos, Minister of Health
The Honourable Marco Mendicino, Minister of Public Safety

Cc: Members of Canada’s Federal Cabinet; Leaders of Opposition Parties

29 October, 2021

Dear Sir/Madam,

We would like to welcome you to your new Cabinet positions by outlining key issues that are shaping Canada’s recovery and on which you must take swift action in your new mandate.  

We are the Migrant Rights Network – Canada’s largest cross-country migrant-led coalition. Our membership is composed of people without permanent resident status – workers, students, undocumented people, refugees and families. Being rooted in migrant communities makes us experts on the impacts of existing policies and programs and the changes necessary to ensure fairness and dignity. As we outline below, initiatives under the previous Liberal mandates have failed to adequately address the real needs of migrants both within and outside Canada, and have not lived up to public promises or statements. Therefore, it is absolutely urgent to chart a new course in this new mandate, informed by the realities and failures of the past.

We call on you to immediately ensure Permanent Resident status for every resident in the country today, and to ensure that all future migrants arrive with Permanent Resident status. Canada has shifted to a system of permanent temporariness: there were at least 1,146,008 migrants on temporary permits on December 30, 2020, and at least an additional 500,000 undocumented people, as compared to only 184,000 new permanent residents in the same year. Over 1.6 million migrants in the country – 1 in 23 residents – face exclusions and exploitation every day. In order to build a fair society and ensure a genuine recovery from the pandemic, migrants must have permanent residency so that they have the same rights and protections as other residents. In order to enable this, the following steps must be taken:

  • First, the federal government must meet with migrant organizations like ours to establish an immigration system that works for everyone and prioritizes the best interests of migrants;
  • Second, a comprehensive regularization process must be created for all migrants in the country to get permanent resident status or citizenship, without any exclusions on the basis of work history, previous immigration status, health status, previous access to social assistance, criminality, or any other language or educational requirements. As an immediate measure, all migrants in Canada should get immediate and open work authorization and full access to basic entitlements;
  • Third, a moratorium on detentions and deportations must be instituted to ensure undocumented people applying for status are protected; and
  • Fourth, all working class migrants arriving to Canada in the future should arrive with Permanent Resident status if they so choose.

In addition, there are several concrete and immediate policy changes that must be instituted in order to protect the health, well-being and safety of migrant and undocumented people, and to prevent the reversal of some important measures put in place during COVID-19. We call on you to make the following changes in the first 100 days of your terms as Ministers in your new portfolio. 

Ensure Safe and Dignified Access to Vaccination and Documentation for All Migrants

  • Vaccine access for all: Many migrants without health coverage, including undocumented people, students, workers and refugees, are still without their first or second dose of the COVID vaccine. We urge you to work with provinces to ensure vaccines are made immediately accessible for all. 
  • Special measures for migrant workers crossing borders: With new rules barring air travel for those without vaccines, many migrant workers, particularly seasonal agricultural workers, risk not being able to board flights to their home countries at the end of the season. Accessible vaccines and special exemptions must be created to ensure that those who wish to travel are able to do so. 
  • Access to vaccine passports: Migrants without ID or health cards who were able to get vaccinated do not have access to vaccine verification systems or passports, and are therefore being denied access to many services and gathering spaces. We call on you to work with us to create specific, accessible and secure documentation systems for those without permanent resident status. Without such mechanisms, vaccine passports must not be instituted.  

Fix the Permanent Residency Pathway System

Our primary demand is ensuring permanent resident status for all, but interim changes to the existing economic immigration regimes can be made, including:

  • Fix the Temporary Resident to Permanent Resident Program: This first-come first-served program, with its arbitrary caps and unfair eligibility requirements, has caused chaos as workers have scrambled to apply. The International Graduates stream closed within 27 hours of opening, the Essential Workers stream closed in ten weeks, and the Healthcare stream has been virtually unused, with nearly 15,000 spots available, but closes November 5th. For the remaining spots available in the program, all eligibility requirements must be waived, including the requirement for temporary resident status so that refugee claimants, those whose applications have been denied and are awaiting appeal or are on a PRRA, and all undocumented people can apply.
  • Transform the Agri-food Immigration Pilot: Only 343 applications have been made in the program as of August 31st from the 2,750 allotted spots. It is clear that the eligibility requirements exclude most agricultural workers. The program must allow Seasonal Agricultural Workers to apply, the education and language requirements must be removed, and workers must be allowed to apply without a job offer from an employer – this requirement only gives employers unchecked power to exploit workers with the promise of permanent residency.
  • Transform the Home Child Care Provider and Home Support Worker pilot programs: As a result of changes in 2019, almost no migrants have been able to apply for this program from outside the country. 1 in 3 migrant care workers lost their jobs during COVID-19, and are therefore unable to meet the work requirement necessary to apply. The Home Child Care Provider stream has been closed for the rest of the year because the arbitrary cap of 2,750 was reached. Those inside Canada are unable to apply because it is impossible to meet educational and language criteria. We urge you to remove the cap, remove the unfair education and language requirements, and remove the requirement of 24 months of work experience. 
  • Change the work requirements in the Canadian Experience Class and lower the CRS score: Currently most migrants in gig work, low-waged work, or part-time work, as well as those with work experience gathered while on a study permit or applying for refugee and humanitarian considerations, are excluded from applying. The requirement for one year of high-waged (so-called ‘high skilled’) work experience excludes racialized, poor and working people, even as those same workers have been essential to ensuring our society continues to function during a pandemic. We urge you to allow all migrants with any work experience in Canada to apply. 
  • Ensure Bridging Open Work Permits (BOWP) for permanent residency applicants: Migrants who applied through the Live-In Caregiver Program or the Interim Pathway for Caregivers, as well as other permanent residency streams, have been waiting months, some for over a year to get BOWPs. Some migrants have applied for PR but were unable to apply for BOWPs before their permit expired and have visitor status or become undocumented,  which means they are unable to work. For the TR to PR program, BOWPs are only being issued if an applicant’s permit expires within 4 months but some migrants who are on employer-tied permits that are still valid are unable to change jobs. We urge you to issue BOWPs to all permanent residency applicants regardless of stream or length of current permit. 
  • Allow migrants to fix errors in permanent residency applications: Currently many applications are returned or turned down for minor errors like missing a single signature by hand, document or translation. Instead migrants should be given the opportunity to remedy errors or provide missing documents. Note that IRCC has often said documents are missing when in fact they were attached with the application. This can delay application processing for years, during which time migrants lose status or income, or their children age out of the family sponsorship age restrictions. The immigration system must be reformed to support migrants to apply rather than punishing them for minor errors. 
  • Clear the backlog: Over 12,000 care workers have PR applications stuck in a processing backlog, in some cases for over 5 years. In addition, processing of permanent resident applications during COVID-19, including those that were initially approved, are stuck in a further backlog. The government promised before the election, to partially clear the backlog this year, and clear the remainder the following year, but the backlog remains. Meanwhile, workers are struggling to get permits, risk losing access to health care, and remain in limbo about their futures, separated from their families. We urge the immediate clearing of the backlog.

Fix the Humanitarian System

  • Transform the in-land refugee processing system: Only 18,500 people – less than a third of the previous year’s total of 58,378 – were able to apply for refugee status in 2020 because of the high costs and evidentiary requirements that were impossible to meet during COVID-19, and compounded by border closures. The numbers in 2021 are worse: only 8,624 asylum claims have been referred in the first six months of the year. There are currently 63,420 people in the refugee backlog. Hearings for inland refugee claims are decided by a board member in an “inquisitorial process” where the board member acts as judge and prosecutor. We urge you to fix the in-land refugee system with direction from refugee organizations focusing on supporting refugee claimants to access refugee status rather than an adversarial system.
  • Transform the Government Assisted refugee resettlement system: Canada accepts only a small number of overseas refugees (39,500 in 2019), and processing can take years while the refugee claimant is stuck living, usually without status, in a third country. Refugee resettlement is at an all-time low due to COVID-19, with only 7,885 refugees referred by the UN to Canada as of September 2021. As has become clear with Canada’s response to the situation in Afghanistan, even targeted and responsive programs have missed the mark and point to much larger problems in Canada’s refugee resettlement system, which is woefully inadequate at meeting the challenges at hand. We urge you to expedite and expand the refugee resettlement process, particularly expanding the government assisted refugee program, resettle refugees beyond those determined by the UNHCR and accept refugees who are still in their country of origin.
  • Transform the Humanitarian and Compassionate (H&C) application system: H&C rejections in Canada doubled in the last two years, from 35% in 2019 to nearly 70% in the first quarter of 2021. Many were turned down for not having “compelling reasons” which is not the test set by the Supreme Court. H&C applications take an average of three years to process, during which time the applicant can be deported and their claim abandoned. We urge you to grant permanent residency to H&C applicants including those that have been denied. Deportations must not take place while an H&C application is being processed. The H&C process must be overhauled focusing on supporting migrants to gain permanent residency on humanitarian grounds rather than an adversarial process.
  • Ensure access to permanent residency and family reunification: Currently, once accepted as refugees, the processing times for permanent resident status is almost two years. Family reunification for people accepted as Convention refugees in Canada reportedly takes about 39 months. We urge you to provide permanent residency immediately to all refugees and ensure family reunification. 

Fix Work Permit Rules and Ensure Decent Work 

  • Restrictions on work create a fundamental “power imbalance”, as Minister Qualtrough acknowledged in June 2020. Migrants are unable to assert their rights because doing so can mean homelessness, deportation, inability to return to work in Canada, or losing a chance at permanent residency.  We urge you to provide work authorizations to all migrants in the country and remove all restrictions on work including employer specific work permits, restrictions on hours of work for study permit holders, and the exclusion of work in “businesses related to sex trade”. 
  • Do not bend to employer calls for more temporary foreign workers: Many business lobby groups are currently appealing to the government to meet labour shortage needs by bringing in more workers on employer restricted permits, which have proven to engender exploitation. We urge you to choose stability and equality over temporariness and exploitation. 
  • Extend the restoration period: For most of COVID-19, migrants who were not able to renew their work permits were given an extended period, until August 31 2021, to restore their status. However, LMIA processing remains slow, and many migrants continue to be unable to get jobs. The restoration period must be extended until the World Health Organization declares an end to the COVID-19 pandemic.
  • Make post graduate work permits renewable: Many migrant student workers have not been able to gain the work experience required to apply for PR within the limited duration of the 1 – 3 year work permits they were granted. The permit was made renewable once but the window closed on July 27th, leaving many excluded. 
  • Expand the public policy to allow employers to hire migrants on visitor status: Migrants on visitor status who have been able to secure a job should be granted work authorization without the Labour Market Impact Assessment (LMIA). Tying workers to employers because of their status enables employer abuse. 
  • Fix the Open Work Permit for Vulnerable Workers (OWP-VW): Currently it is impossible for a migrant worker to apply for this permit without support from legal case workers, which is untenable for most. The burden of evidence is such that most workers are unable to apply. The permit is non-renewable with no access to permanent residency, meaning that migrants have no choice but to return to the exploitative jobs and employer restricted work permits they were fleeing in the first place. Furthermore, most employers are unwilling to apply for LMIAs for workers who have spoken up against abuse. The OWP-VW system must be streamlined to allow migrants to apply on their own, and in their own language; workers must be provided transition support by way of income and housing while applying; the permits must be renewable; and migrants on other work and study permits in a vulnerable situation must be allowed to apply.
  • Implement enforceable national housing standards for migrant workers as recommended in our November 2020 submissions to the consultation on migrant worker housing standards. 
  • Work with provinces and territories to increase wages and ensure proactive employment standards enforcement: Migrant workers do not have direct enforceable rights under existing federal rules. There is no legislation that governs enforcement and no court or legal process workers can turn to to denounce violations of their rights. Neither is there any meaningful mechanism for Employment and Social Development Canada (ESDC) to ensure workers receive remedies for violations of their rights. All that exists is a tip-line but by law ESDC is barred from sharing the fact of inspections, and results of inspections, with workers that made complaints.

Stop Detentions and Deportations

  • COVID-19 saw a reduction in immigration detention in some regions with no negative impact on communities, demonstrating that detention is unnecessary, unfair and arbitrary. We urge you to end detentions, without resorting to in-community detention practices like electronic monitoring bracelets or voice recognition check-ins. 
  • 2020 saw more deportations than the previous five years, even as many countries around the world are still facing serious COVID-19 crises. We urge you to immediately halt all removals. 

Unite Families

  • Being with our loved ones is a fundamental human right and we urge you to make changes so that migrants are able to have their families stay with them and visit them if they so choose. 
  • Ensure access to open work permits, study permits and universal healthcare for spouses, children, parents and grandparents on super visas. Many of them are working, but forced to do so without labour protections and therefore face greater exploitation.
  • Expand family reunification to include extended and adopted family members, including adult siblings and cousins. We urge you to allow migrants to determine who their family members are.

Reinstate CRB for all migrants, fix Employment Insurance and ensure access to federal supports

  • The Canada Recovery Benefit ended on October 23, 2021, despite the on-going COVID-19 economic downturn. Most migrants, including those without Social Insurance Numbers, were unable to apply in the first place. We urge you to extend benefits until the pandemic is officially declared over by the World Health Organization, restore the minimum weekly benefit rate of $500 for all recipients, and ensure all residents have access regardless of immigration status.
  • We urge you to amend the Employment Insurance Act to ensure that all work in Canada is “insurable” for the purposes of accessing EI, regardless of SIN. Canada should pursue employers who fail to submit EI contributions, rather than punishing workers. In order to end disentitlement due to administrative error, Service Canada must immediately issue instructions to Service Canada agents to ensure the EI application process is accessible to all by providing interpretation services, clear information that the Record of Employment is not needed to submit an application, and alternatives to online applications and communications. The government must end discriminatory disentitlement to special benefits for workers outside of the country or with expired SINs, and take all steps necessary to ensure that information workers submit to EI is not shared with immigration officials.
  • Ensure that the Canada Child Benefit is available to all families regardless of the immigration status of the parents or the child.
  • Ensure that all migrants, regardless of immigration status, are able to access the Canada Pension Plan, Old Age Security and any other federal benefits and entitlements. 
  • Work with provinces and territories to ensure that healthcare, primary and post-secondary education, public housing, social assistance and all other entitlements are accessible to migrants regardless of immigration status.  

We look forward to discussing these pragmatic steps towards ensuring full and permanent immigration status for all, and rebuilding a more equitable society. Please contact us at info@migrantrights.ca to continue the conversation. 

Sincerely,
Migrant Rights Network

Download PDF: Letter to Cabinet – Migrant Rights Network October 2021

Tell Parliament to ensure a just recovery from COVID-19!

Posted on September 26, 2021

Please wait for the petition to load. Scroll below to read why we have a small window to act and win big, starting with you sending this message.

After the elections

The Liberal Party of Canada has again won a minority government. Though Parliament looks very similar to what it did before the election was called, there are both opportunities and dangers that we must all respond to.

Already, Canada’s lobby group for rich corporations (Canadian Chamber of Commerce) is calling for more money for the rich, and more temporary immigrants for bosses to exploit. In the next few weeks, Canada’s political parties can choose to focus on cutting back spending and public services, and allow racism to continue to grow, or they can support a more just recovery from COVID-19 that includes everyone, particularly Indigenous people, working class people, women, racialized people, migrants, poor, queer and disabled communities. 

What they do is up to us.

Send a message right now calling for Parliament to focus on a recovery from COVID-19 that ensures justice for all of us.

The challenges

None of the political parties got what they wanted in this election. The Liberal party was not able to get a majority of seats, and the Conservatives, the New Democratic Party, and the Green Party expected a much better result than they got. There is a danger that political parties may choose to focus on internal problems, like changing party leaders, instead of on fixing the problems the majority of us are facing right now. Politicians may choose to do little to play it safe. 

The Conservative Party gained more votes (though they didn’t win the most seats), and the right-wing populist People’s Party of Canada also doubled its vote count. The Liberal Party and the NDP might think that this means they should abandon their more progressive ideas and push more conservative ones instead, so that they can win back some of those votes in the future. 

Our job right now therefore is to insist on courageous and transformative action rather than allow political parties to either do nothing or to slash supports and rights for working class people.

There is no time to lose. In a matter of weeks, many emergency income supports created during COVID will be cut off. Politicians will start to sound the alarm about deficits and COVID spending, demanding cuts everywhere. Low-waged people will have nowhere to turn, even as a fourth wave of COVID-19 rages on, particularly in Alberta. The clock is ticking on climate change and Canada is lagging behind. This election has also seen the coming together of those opposing vaccines and violent racists, who now feel more bold. A Punjabi migrant student was murdered in Nova Scotia just two weeks ago. This racism must be confronted. 

The opportunity

Liberal minority governments have historically meant more progressive action can be pushed through Parliament. With the New Democratic Party’s support, the Liberal Party has enough votes to pass any law. Liberal promises are a mixed bag – some good, some bad. But a strong public push on the streets, and raising our voices on social and mainstream media, can push the NDP and the Liberals to do the right thing. 

Most political parties promised a “path to permanence” during the elections. This is a response to migrants organizing to show that without permanent resident status it is not possible to have basic rights. But this solution is wrong. Pathways means people come, live, and work in Canada in dangerous and difficult conditions, with an uncertain hope of ever getting equal rights through citizenship. A “path to permanence” is continued exploitation. We instead demand full and permanent status immediately.   

Parties also promised a $15 federal minimum wage, 10 paid sick days, $10 a day childcare, pharmacare and action on Indigenous concerns, racism, housing, climate and global justice. The Migrant Rights Network calls for immediate implementation of these measures in a way that includes all migrants and under the leadership of movements who are fighting on these issues. 

We win what we have the power to win.

Migrants win when we unite with others like us and take brave action for justice. The Migrant Rights Network will support migrants to get organized – get in touch with us! Migrants also win when we unite with others struggling for justice – Indigenous people, labour and student unions, gender justice and queer movements, anti-poverty and disability rights movements, and climate justice organizations. The Migrant Rights Network calls on all such movements to unite and push for better. 

Take the next step – scroll up to send an email. 

Dangerous plans no one is talking about

Posted on September 3, 2021

The Conservatives are leading in the polls, and their plans for immigration are very worse than what they want you to believe.

Take action now to demand equal rights for migrants, send a message to all political parties: https://migrantrights.ca/elxn44/ 

The Conservatives Immigration Plan: 

(1) US border police in, refugees out

The Conservatives plan to start US style border patrols and expand the Safe Third Country Agreement making it even more dangerous for refugees to come into Canada. And they plan to grow a controversial program that would give armed US border police* the power to stop and arrest refugees inside Canada. 

*Yes, the same US border police that jails children.

(2) Scrap the government assisted refugee program

The Conservatives plan to scrap Canada’s entire government assisted refugee resettlement program. This will mean massive cuts to already insufficient support. The Conservatives plan to create instead a private and joint public-private sponsorship system which they say won’t mean less funding or fewer refugees. But we know from the last 20 years, more privatization means cuts to government assistance. 

(3) More power for bad bosses

Migrants in agriculture, care work and other industries fell sick and died during COVID-19 because without citizenship they could not protect themselves. The Conservatives plan to make it even easier for employers to hire migrant workers on tied work permits with few rights. The Conservatives also want to make a “path to permanence” dependent on employer sponsorship. This means even more power for bad bosses who can use the promise of immigration as a carrot and a stick to further exploit migrants. 

(4) Poor people to the back of the line

The Conservatives plan to make the immigration system pay-to-play. Rich people will be able to speed up their applications by paying more. Poor and working class people will have another disadvantage and be pushed to the back of the line, separated from our families and denied rights for years. 

(5) Keeping out our parents and grandparents

The Conservatives plan to create new testing requirements for parents and grandparent unification. This means immigrants with elders who don’t have the resources to learn one of Canada’s official languages and take expensive tests at their old age will not be able to unite with their families. 

(6) More police and prisons

The Conservatives plan to expand prison and police for migrants. Canada deported more people in 2020, during a global health pandemic, than in any of the previous five years. The Conservatives believe that Trudeau didn’t go far enough. They also want to add even more enforcement rules to visas which will mean more criminalization of people of colour.

Take action now to demand equal rights for migrants, send a message to all political parties: https://migrantrights.ca/elxn44/ 

 

Our historic March to Ottawa

Posted on July 26, 2021

On July 25, 2021, almost 1000 of us – undocumented, migrant worker, refugee, student worker – took over the streets of Ottawa to demand full and permanent immigration status for all now from the Trudeau government. We came on buses, cars, trains and bikes from around the country.

Our historic march was covered on the CBC, Capital Current, Radio Canada, Journal de Montréal, Le Droit, La Presse, TVA Nouvelles, and Ming Pao.  Scroll below to watch this Global TV coverage featuring the voices of migrants from across Ontario and Quebec.


See more images from the historic march on Ottawa.

Over the last few months, the Trudeau government has announced a number of short-term, partial programs that will give access to permanent residency for some migrants. But too many have been left behind by these programs, shut out by unfair language and work requirements and high fees. Meanwhile, the same government accepted far fewer refugees and rejected far more humanitarian applications for status by undocumented people already living in Canada.

Now, with an election around the corner, the government wants to show off its exclusionary programs and say it has fixed the immigration system.

But we went to Ottawa to demand more. To say that there is no equality without status for all. To say we will leave no one behind.

Permanent resident status is about equal rights and protections. It is not a gift or a privilege, it is the only existing mechanism for migrants to access the same rights and security as any other residents. Today, over 1.6 million people are excluded from this equality in various ways through their immigration status, with the greatest exploitation faced by those that are low-income, racialized and undocumented.

March to Ottawa for Status for All!

Posted on July 22, 2021

We are going to Ottawa! Join in-person or online to demand full and permanent immigration status for all!

July 1: Our responsibility to each other

Posted on July 1, 2021

At least 1,252 unmarked graves of Indigenous children have been discovered at just six forced assimilation schools in Canada in the last two months. 

As migrants – students, refugees, workers, and undocumented people – many of us came to Canada in search of a better life. We were told that Canada is a country of freedom and opportunity where rights are protected. We did not expect thousands of children in unmarked graves. 

Today, actions online and in-person are taking place across the country. Join and learn more. 


Canada’s policies against Indigenous people

For thousands of years, Indigenous people lived here, and had governments, institutions, and societies before colonizers arrived and created what today is known as Canada. 

Colonizers established Canada through the theft of Indigenous lands, and that theft is continuing. Today, 89% of Canada’s entire land mass is called “Crown land” – land controlled by the provincial and federal governments. But Indigenous people have claims to these lands that even Canada’s Supreme Court has upheld. Yet governments continue to try to increase their control over these territories – in the courts and by subsidizing mining and resource extraction projects.

To steal these lands, Canada tries to destroy indigenous communities and cultures, and the ‘residential school’ system was a central way of doing that. At least 150,000 indigenous children were forcibly removed from their families, prevented from speaking their languages and practicing their cultures, abused and subjected to neglect and starvation. Many never returned to their families. 

Every day, in a thousand different ways, Canadian governments and officials are working to undermine Indigenous rights and people to assert control over this land:

  • Indigenous children are 7% of the youth population, but they represent 52% of children in foster care – continuing to be forcibly separated from their families. 
  • Indigenous education and housing is chronically underfunded. Dozens of communities still today don’t even have safe drinking water. 
  • Indigenous people are policed and jailed at a much higher rate than others. 
  • Police and government have looked away and allowed the abuse and exploitation of Indigenous women, resulting in thousands missing or murdered. 

As recently as 2019, Canada’s ongoing treatment of Indigenous people was termed a “genocide” by a National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls.


What does this mean for us as migrants?

The goal for many of us is to get citizenship. Citizenship is just a mechanism through which we access rights and reunite with our families. Getting citizenship does not mean agreeing with or supporting what Canada does.

As migrants, we can and must open our eyes to the colonialism taking place here. That begins with unlearning what we have been told about “Canada the good”, and seeing the truth. To get started, watch this conversation about Indigenous and Black liberation in Canada.

Many of us have seen the impact of colonialism in the places we come from. And we see those places continue to suffer under policies made by western governments and profit-making for the rich. The same is happening in Canada. 

As people who have also been displaced – whether by conflict, persecution, environmental catastrophes, or for economic reasons – we cannot ask for equal rights for ourselves here while accepting the continued violation of the rights of others.  

We migrants are excluded from equal rights, forced into bad jobs, face racism, and are separated from our families. These things happen to us because of Canadian laws. Indigenous communities are displaced from their lands, families torn apart, and are subjected to racism and without equal rights – because of Canadian laws. As migrants we are responsible to  Indigenous communities not the policy makers and governments who exploit us all.

Our call is for full and permanent immigration status for everyone here now, and everyone that arrives in the future. We are demanding that everyone have the same rights and opportunities – not just migrants, but all residents, and that must include Indigenous people.

Therefore our fight must always include supporting Indigenous peoples’ fight for justice. Take action today by finding an action near you and watching this short animated short-video about Indigenous people calling for Land Back. 

 

World Refugee Day 2021

Posted on June 20, 2021

Canada claims to be “generous”, but in 2020 Canada accepted just over 25,500 refugees out of the over 82.4 million forcibly displaced people in the world – or 1 in 33,000 people.

And there are tens of thousands of refugees in Canada, working and living without labour rights, healthcare or other protections because they are waiting for or have been denied permanent resident status.

It’s important to know how Canada’s refugee system works to understand how much its failing people. Canada’s refugee system has two parts: in-land (applicants inside Canada) and resettlement (refugees outside Canada).

In- Land Applications

In-land applications are migrants that arrive in the country at the border (on planes or on foot), or are in the country already on other visas and apply for refugee status. In 2020, Canada accepted just 16,209 people in this stream – 1 out of 3 that applied were rejected.

Not only are rejections high, the backlog is enormous. As of March 30th this year, nearly 70,000 people are living in limbo, without equal rights, waiting for a decision on their applications.

During COVID-19, Canada has effectively slammed the door shut on refugees who simply aren’t able to enter or apply. Only 18,500 people were able to make applications in 2020, less than a third of the previous year of 58,378. 2021 looks even worse- only 2,245 new applications were received in the first three months this year. This while global displacement continued to rise.

The backlog, long processing times and high costs mean that many people abandon their applications before they get a decision. Refugees that are rejected have to go through a difficult and expensive appeals process, during which time they are excluded from basic rights, and many are unable to do so. Those that become undocumented live without basic rights, and therefore without the ability to fully protect themselves.

Canada must open its borders to refugees. Every resident of the country must have the equal rights, and that means the same permanent resident status.

Resettlement

Canada’s resettlement program (refugees that arrive as refugees from outside the country) is divided into three parts: government-assisted, private, and a blend of the two. Between January and October 2020, the Canadian government only assisted in the resettlement of 3,035 people, while 4,139 were resettled privately or with blended support.

These are incredibly low numbers, even for Canada. Mass exclusion of people fleeing for their lives is not a given. Throughout COVID-19, the government was able to ensure free flow of workers, study permit holders and citizens when it chose to. That refugees were excluded is a political decision, not a public health necessity.

People around the world are displaced as a result of decisions taken in wealthy countries like Canada. Today, Canada has one of the highest per capita greenhouse gas emissions in the world, which is responsible for global climate change that displaces people in large numbers. Canada continues to sell weapons to Saudi Arabia which uses them in Yemen, resulting in millions displaced. And Canada supports and enforces crippling sanctions on Venezuela which has worsened economic conditions, forcing many to flee.

And that thing about Canada being the most generous? Each year, for World Refugee Day, the UN issues a global displacement report. Top 5 host countries this year are: Turkey, Colombia, Germany, Pakistan and Uganda, Canada doesn’t even make the top 10.

International Domestic Workers Day 2021

Posted on June 16, 2021

Migrant domestic workers have been coming to Canada without full immigration status – which means without full rights – since 1955. Sixty-six years of exclusion and exploitation. And for sixty six years they have been leading the fight for justice. 

Today is International Domestic Workers Day – a day to mark decades of organizing to win respect and rights for those who do the in-home labour, and care for children, sick and the elderly. 

International Domestic Workers Day marks the 10th anniversary of the Convention on Decent Work for Domestic Workers of the International Labour Organization (ILO Convention 189). It requires countries to ensure equal rights for domestic workers. Canada refuses to sign this convention or implement it. 

And so today we reflect on our histories: 

  • Black Caribbean women, along with many other workers, led the fight to create a path to permanent residence (PR) for migrant care workers in the 1980s. 
  • In the 1990s, workers’ struggles forced the removal of a number of exclusionary requirements, but care workers were forced to live in employer homes.
  • In 2010, migrant care workers won the Juana Tejada law, removing the requirement for a second medical exam to get PR. 
  • In 2014, care workers won an end to the live-in requirement. But a cap of 2,750 per year was put on PR applications, and unfair requirements for English and education were put in place. 
  • In 2017, care workers led the fight to remove medical inadmissibility rules, which led to them being significantly reduced, though they remain in place. 
  • In 2019, care workers won an Interim Pathway to allow many workers in Canada to get PR without the exclusionary requirements introduced in 2017. 
  • And during COVID-19, migrant care workers are organizing across the country for vaccine access, mobility and immigration and labour rights. 

Migrant women hold up Canada: Temporary foreign workers make up 10% of private household workers in Canada. Thousands of undocumented mostly racialized women are doing in-home domestic work. Thousands more migrant women are working in long-term care homes and as personal support workers. 

But immigration laws force care workers into abusive jobs. Many care workers are tied to their employers, dependent on them for healthcare and housing, and separated from their families for years. According to our last survey, 1 in 3 workers we spoke to were laid off during COVID-19 but are not allowed to work anywhere else. 

Even those who complete the impossible PR requirements are made to wait  years to hear a decision on their applications. Many of us signed petitions and delivered them on May 9th. As a result the government promised to process 6,000 out of 12,000 applications in the backlog by the end of this year. That means half have to wait another year and half, stuck with potentially abusive employers and without open work permits. 

Worse still, no new PR applications for childcare workers are being accepted this year. The program’s arbitrary cap of 2,750 applications per year was reached on April 30th, and care workers must now wait until next year to apply. 

Those who fall out of status because of these impossible requirements or are in undocumented care work are unable to assert their rights at work and are shut out of basic services like health care and income support. 

The government’s new PR program for essential workers that opened in May allows some care workers to apply. But those who have lost their status, those without work or without English language test results are excluded. 

But migrant care workers are continuing the struggle, join in! On June 20th, find an action near you or organize one in your community: https://migrantrights.ca/june20/

  • VANCOUVER: June 20, 10am, CBC Plaza.
  • TORONTO: June 20, 1pm, IRB, 74 Victoria Street, March to City Hall
  • SUDBURY: June 20, 1pm, MP Marc Serrée Constituency office. 2914 Hwy 69 N, Unit 1, Val Caron
  • ONLINE: Take a photo with your family and post a message to Justin Trudeau: Unite All Families! Status for All!. Make sure to tag @MigrantRightsCA
  • IN YOUR NEIGHBOURHOOD: Put up posters and distribute pamphlets.

Report: Disappointment, Chaos & Exploitations – Canada’s New Short-Term Immigration Pathway

Posted on May 4, 2021

We are releasing a rapid-report today with a snapshot of 3,000 of our migrant members who filled out our survey over the last two week about the new short-term immigration pilot program announced on April 14th. Our report reveals that 1.18 million undocumented residents, refugees, students and migrants in Quebec are not allowed to apply. In addition, 45.4% of migrant workers and 34.5% of international graduates that filled out the survey are also excluded from the new program. An additional 48.27% of international graduates and 45.4% of migrant workers do not have the language test results required to apply for this first-come, first-served program.

This is unfair and unjust. We are calling on Prime Minister Trudeau to ensure permanent resident status for all migrant and undocumented people in the country, and ensure that all working class migrants that arrive in the future do so with permanent resident status. The current program must be expanded to include everyone without permanent status; all caps and the 6-month window must be removed; residents of Quebec must be allowed to apply; and requirements for an English language test, educational credentials, current employment, and valid immigration status must be removed. Any other inadmissibility requirements must also be removed, and the application fees waived for low-wage workers.

Read the report | Call PM Trudeau Right Now! | Read the Press Release

 

 

In addition to the exclusions in the program itself, the announcement has created a wave of chaos and confusion over migrant and undocumented communities across the country that is being exploited by bad actors.  

(1) Language testing centres and agents profiting: There are only two accepted English testing programs migrants can use in Canada, IELTS and CELPIP. Within hours of the announcement on April 14, both their websites crashed as a result of the large numbers of people trying to register for tests. It took almost a week for the websites to come back online, and in many cases, there are no open spots for months. In Calgary, for example, the next open IELTS test is August 7th. Those migrants who are constrained by their employers and unable to leave employer-provided housing, particularly farmworkers and care workers, cannot go to testing centres. Others are not allowed time off to study or to take the test. Testing centres are only available in major cities, and travel from rural communities during COVID-19 is either dangerous or simply impossible because of lockdown measures. Doing tests online is difficult for many because of lack of reliable internet access or computers. Cumulatively, this has meant that migrants are struggling to register for tests. Others are paying the high fees anyway even though they don’t meet other requirements. This is a boon for IELTS and CELPIP language centres. Many bad actors are offering fake exams and test-prep tools or promising to secure a test date  at exorbitant prices. Many migrants, particularly Spanish-speaking farmworkers, are struggling to learn the language and pass the test in the short window the program will be open. 

(2) Bad employers taking advantage: One of the requirements of the program is to be currently employed. This means that migrants on any kind of leave from their current job, paid or unpaid, must return to work to qualify. This can include anyone on parental or caregiver leave, or taking unpaid sick time to quarantine for COVID-19. But racialized unemployment in Canada is high, particularly for migrants. For example, according to our Migrant Rights Network survey in November 2020, 1 in 3 migrant care workers were laid off during COVID-19. Because of the state of unemployment, many people are willing to accept any job and under any conditions, even work for far below minimum wage to be able to apply for this program. In some cases, bad actors are promising job letters in return for high fees. Migrant workers on tied work permits are only allowed to work for the employers listed on their permits. Workers who were forced to leave bad jobs are now being faced with the impossible choice to return to those same bad employers. Migrants who are self-employed or are gig workers are quitting those jobs for others that pay less or not at all, just to fulfill program requirements. Many workers have already reported employers taking advantage of this PR program to further exploit workers.  

(3) Travelling no matter the cost: Canada has closed its borders to many migrants. Flights are also suspended from Mexico, Caribbean countries, India and Pakistan. Migrants must be in Canada to apply. As a result, many are buying expensive last minute tickets, transiting through multiple countries, with greater risk of COVID to get around flight restrictions simply to make it back in time to apply. Many recruiters, agents and unscrupulous immigration consultants are promising “special letters”, at very high prices, that migrants can show at the airport to be allowed in, most of which are fake. 

(4) Lack of information: Since the initial announcement on April 14th, the federal government has not provided any further information about the details of the application or the documents required. Hundreds of thousands have had questions that have not been answered, and it has fallen to migrant-led organizations like ours to fill the gap. Meanwhile, unscrupulous recruiters, agents, immigration consultants and lawyers are spreading misinformation and promising miracles for high fees. Those particularly being targeted are undocumented people, refugees and low-wage workers, including those without access to internet, or high levels of English and French literacy. 

(5) High fees: While details of fees have not been announced, a permanent resident application costs $1,135 per application, and $1,945.00 for a 2 parent, 2 children family. Immigration consultants on average are advertising $4,000 to do applications, with some asking for much more. Getting documents from overseas or renewing them also costs money. Migrants will also have to pay for medical tests for all members of the family, if they are invited to do so. These are substantial fees for migrants working in low-waged jobs or for minimum wage – in some cases more than what many earn in a month. Many low-wage workers simply don’t have thousands of dollars saved, and the first come, first-served means those with money will be able to apply beore low-wage workers. Some workers, specifically care workers, who have already submitted applications through the Care Worker Pilot program but have been waiting over a year or two for an answer are now being encouraged to apply through this stream, paying fees twice in the hopes of getting PR faster.  

(6) COVID-19 barriers to getting documentation: Immigration applications require extensive documentation, including police clearances, educational transcripts, valid passports, etc. With COVID-19 continuing to ravage countries in the Global South in particular, getting such documents is incredibly difficult. This particular program requires that migrants must have all documents assembled to apply with at the same time. Applicants from richer countries (Europe, USA, etc.) where government bureaucracies continue to function and embassies remain open have a significant advantage.

May 9: Unite All Families! Status for All!

Posted on April 27, 2021

COVID-19 doesn’t pick or choose, but laws and policies do. As a result, it’s Indigenous, Black and Brown communities, poor people, women, the elderly, and migrants that are worse impacted. 

Everyone deserves rights, dignity and protection. But the federal government announced a new permanent residency program for essential workers that excludes most migrants. Families will remain separated, and the threat of deportations and being ripped out of communities we have built here remains hanging on all of us without permanent resident status. 

This program was created because migrants organized, and allies joined us. We must push harder. That’s why on May 9th, migrants across the country rallied to take action! 

Montreal, May 9th, More photos.

Edmonton, May 9th, More photos

Vancouver, May 9th, Video

Eligibility Requirements for New Short-Term PR Program

Posted on April 20, 2021

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Information on this website is subject to change, please come back to review often. 

On April 14, 2021, the federal government announced the creation of a new short-term program for permanent residency. To qualify for the program, you must meet all of the following criteria:

  1. You must be working at the time of application. You must be authorized to work or be eligible to restore your work authorization. You do not necessarily need to be employed in the sector through which you qualify for the program. Self-employed work in any qualifying sector does not count.
  2. You must have temporary status in Canada. Most refugee claimants with work permits do not have temporary status. Undocumented people are excluded.
  3. If you are applying through Stream A or B, you must have 12 months (1560 hours) of accumulated work experience in the previous 3 years in the qualifying sectors.
  4. If you are applying through Stream A or B, you must prove CLB Level 4 language competency. If you are applying through the educational stream, you must prove CLB Level 5.
  5. You must not be inadmissible under the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act.
  6. You must be inside Canada, and cannot reside in Quebec. If you are in Quebec, you can apply but you must prove that you will not continue to live in Quebec.
  7. You must file a complete application online, and pay fees (approximately $1,133) when you apply.
  8. The streams are:
    1. STREAM A & B: 20,000 spots for temporary workers in 40 occupations in health care and 30,000 spots for temporary workers in 95 selected essential occupations including caregiving and food production and distribution. Click here for list of occupations.
    2. EDUCATIONAL STREAM: 40,000 spots for international students who have graduated with a minimum 8 month degree from a university, or a 16 month certificate or diploma from a Canadian college in the last 4 years, but no earlier than January 2017. You do not need any work experience for these two avenues. If you completed an education term shorter than the 16 month certificate, but your education led to a skilled trade you are also eligible. You must have met the conditions of your study permit throughout your studies. Click here for list of occupations and more details.
    3. French-speaking or bilingual candidates outside of Quebec are eligible through the same streams but do not have a cap on spots. See more here and here.

Applications will open on May 6 and will remain open for six months or when the caps are reached. Other final details will only be available when the program opens on May 6th. 

If you do not qualify for this program, do not lose hope. This program was only created because migrants spoke up, we must continue to raise our voice to call for full and permanent immigration status for all. Sign the petition here. 

Migrant Workers Alliance for Change has created a tool to help you see if you are eligible, click here. 


Requisitos de elegibilidad para el nuevo programa de residencia permanente

La información de este sitio web está sujeta a cambios, vuelva a revisarla con frecuencia.

El 14 de abril de 2021, el gobierno federal anunció la creación de un nuevo programa temporal para solicitar la residencia permanente. Para calificar para el programa, debe cumplir con todos los siguientes requisitos:

  1. Debe estar trabajando en el momento de la solicitud. Debe estar autorizado para trabajar, o ser elegible para restaurar su autorización de trabajo. No es necesario que esté empleado en el sector a través del cual califica para el programa. El trabajo por cuenta propia en cualquier sector calificado no cuenta.
  2. Debe tener un estatus de residente temporal en Canadá. La mayoría de los solicitantes de refugio con permisos de trabajo no tienen un estatus temporal. Las personas indocumentadas son excluidas.
  3. Si está solicitando a través de la Categoría A o B, debe tener 12 meses (1560 horas) de experiencia laboral acumulada en los últimos 3 años en los sectores calificados.
  4. Si presenta la solicitud a través de la Categoría A o B, debe demostrar su competencia lingüística al Nivel 4 de acuerdo con Canadian Language Benchmarks (CLB). Si presenta la solicitud a través de la Categoría Educacional, debe demostrar el nivel 5 de CLB.
  5. No puede ser considerado inadmisible bajo la Ley de Protección de Inmigración y Refugiados (IRPA).
  6. Debe estar corrientemente en Canadá y no puede residir en Quebec. Si se encuentra en Quebec, puede presentar una solicitud, pero debe demostrar que no continuará viviendo en Quebec.
  7. Debe presentar una solicitud completa en línea y pagar las tarifas (aproximadamente $1,133CAD) cuando presente la solicitud.
  8. Las categorías del programa son:
    1. CATEGORÍA A & B: 20,000 plazas para trabajadores temporales en 40 ocupaciones en el sector de salud, y 30,000 plazas para trabajadores temporales en 95 ocupaciones esenciales, incluyendo cuidados domésticos y la producción y distribución de alimentos. Haga clic aquí para ver la lista de ocupaciones.
    2. CATEGORÍA EDUCACIONAL: 40,000 plazas para estudiantes internacionales que se hayan graduado con un título mínimo de 8 meses de una universidad, o un certificado o diploma de 16 meses de un instituto o colegio técnico canadiense en los últimos 4 años, pero no antes del enero del 2017. No necesita ninguna experiencia laboral para postular en esta categoría. Si completó un programa de educación de menos de 16 meses, pero su educación le llevó a ciertos oficios calificados, también es elegible. Debe haber cumplido con las condiciones de su permiso de estudio. Haga clic aquí para obtener una lista de ocupaciones y más detalles.
    3. Los candidatos bilingües o de habla francesa fuera de Quebec son elegibles a través de las mismas categorías, pero no tienen un límite de plazas. Vea más aquí y aquí.

Las solicitudes abren el 6 de mayo y permanecerán abiertas por seis meses o hasta cuando se llenen todas las plazas. Mayores detalles sobre el proceso de solicitud solo estarán disponibles cuando el programa se abra el 6 de mayo.

Si no califica para este programa, no pierda la esperanza. Este programa solo se creó porque los migrantes alzaron la voz. Debemos seguir alzando la voz para pedir un estatus migratorio permanente para todos y todas. Firma la petición aquí.

La Alianza de Trabajador@s Migrantes por el Cambio (Migrant Workers Alliance for Change, MWAC) ha creado una herramienta para ayudarle a ver si es elegible: haga clic aquí (en inglés). Si es trabajador@ agrícola, haga clic aquí para ver si es elegible.

Federal Budget Fails to Deliver Immigration Rights, Continues Focus on Failed Temporary Programs

Posted on April 20, 2021

Full and Permanent Immigration Status for All Residents Is Essential to Building an Equal Society Post COVID19

Canada, April 20, 2021 – The 2021 federal budget continues Canada’s trajectory of temporary migration, where the majority of new arrivals each year are on temporary study, work or refugee permits without equal rights or services. $168.3 million dollars has been allocated to paying for the management and the fallout of temporary immigration streams, and almost a billion dollars for border enforcement rather than ensuring full and permanent immigration status for all. The federal budget’s announcement of a childcare program does not ensure permanent resident status on arrival for the tens of thousands of low-waged, racialized migrant women who take care of children. There is no recovery without full equality and that requires full and permanent immigration status for all.  

The Trudeau government’s budget  announced the following on Im/migration: 

  • Budget 2021 acknowledges that migrants were responsible for 75% of Canada’s net GDP growth in 2019, but does not ensure equal rights for migrants. 
  • The Budget re-commits the federal government to recently announced time-limited and exclusionary pathways to permanent residence. 
    • This program excludes undocumeted migrants, refugees, students in programs less than 2 years long, those that are currently unemployed, those without valid work authorization, those that cannot pass language exams, and those in many essential industries. There are only 90,000 spots for hundreds of thousands of potential applicants who are scrambling  to get their applications in order, and pass language tests during the third wave.
  • Budget 2021 announces that the Government of Canada intends to propose amendments to the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act to provide the Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada with even more authority to determine who becomes a permanent resident. 
    • Over the last decade, incredible power has been centralized in the Minister’s hands resulting in the proliferation of so-called Pilot Programs, creating more and more temporary immigration streams and “pathways” to permanent residency that few people can access. It is time to overhaul the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act to ensure permanent resident status for all migrants, including on arrival. 
  • Budget 2021 proposes to provide $656.1 million over five years, beginning in 2021-22, and $123.8 million ongoing, to the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) to modernize the borders.
    • These funds will likely result in increased immigration enforcement, more integration with US Border control but will not ensure oversight of CBSA. Border enforcement will not fight COVID nor heal any wounds of the pandemic – border enforcement only deepens them.
  • Budget 2021 proposes to provide $57.6 million in 2021-22 to extend the Mandatory Isolation Support for Temporary Foreign Workers Program to help employers offset costs associated with temporary foreign workers fulfilling isolation requirements upon entering Canada.
    • Since the beginning of the pandemic increased subsidies for employers have failed to improve quarantine conditions for migrant workers. Migrant farmworkers report lack of sufficient or appropriate food, illegal deductions from pay, and restrictions on mobility far greater than public health requirements. Migrants need permanent resident status to access and enforce rights. 
  • $54.9 million over three years, starting in 2021-22, to Employment and Social Development Canada (ESDC) and Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada, to increase inspections
    • ESDC’s inspection program does not give migrant workers the ability to assert their rights. By law, ESDC cannot even share the fact or results of an inspection with the workers whose complaints triggered those inspections in the first place, much less ensure that they are compensated in instances of abuse. Only six employers have been found ineligible through these inspections since the start of COVID-19, despite the wave of massive COVID outbreaks, migrant worker deaths, and worker complaints that occured in the first and second waves of the pandemic.
  • $6.3 million over three years, starting in 2021-22, to Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada, to support faster processing and improved service delivery of open work permits for vulnerable workers
    • Most migrants cannot apply for these permits because of onerous application procedures which require access to legal advice  and documentation. Open work permits for vulnerable workers are one-time non-renewable permits – they are a band-aid solution that allows some to exit one bad job but then forces workers right back into the system that produced those bad jobs. Tied work permits and temporary immigration status are the problem, not processing.
  • Budget 2021 proposes to invest $428.9 million over five years, with $398.5 million in remaining amortization, starting in 2021-22, to develop and deliver a new digital platform for immigration process.
    • The problems with the immigration system are not just about technology. Processing backlogs and long wait times are the result of the many unjust and impossible requirements migrants must meet in order to access permanent residency.
  • $49.5 million over three years, starting in 2021-22, to Employment and Social Development Canada, to support community-based organizations in the provision of migrant worker-centric programs and services, such as on-arrival orientation services and assistance in emergency and at-risk situations, through the new Migrant Worker Support Program.
    • This funding aims to provide rights information to migrants without permanent resident status that migrant groups have called a “waste of resources”. But the problem is not that migrants don’t have information about their rights, it’s that they are either excluded from rights or cannot assert those they do have without risking termination and deportation, because of their temporary immigration status. 

 

 

 

— 

Media Contact:
Syed Hussan
416-453-3632
hussan@migrantworkersalliance.org 

 

Migrants win path to Permanent Residence! We want Status for All!

Posted on April 14, 2021

10 months ago today we began our campaign for full and permanent immigration status for all. Today, migrants won a major victory. At least 90,000 more people and their families will get permanent resident status! 

Click here to see if you are eligible.

Migrants bravely spoke up about injustice and forced the federal government to acknowledge that permanent resident status is necessary to be able to access or assert basic rights. Today’s announcement proves that the federal government can change immigration rules. Full and permanent immigration status for all in the country and permanent resident status on arrival for all in the future is possible and we will not stop until we win it. Nothing less is acceptable. Your support has been crucial in this victory and we ask you to recommit to this fight. 

Today’s announcement creates a partial and short-term opening to PR for some but does not change the fundamentally temporary nature of the immigration system. Each year hundreds of thousands of people come with temporary permits. The new program only includes migrants with select work experience and denies status to anyone who is unemployed, even in an economic downturn.

All undocumented migrants – over 500,000 people – are excluded from this new program, despite the essential work many are doing in our communities. It is the temporary immigration system that has pushed our communities out of status, and it is the same immigration system that continues to keep us out. 

The new program includes English language requirements which will exclude many groups of workers and entire communities. Many migrants who otherwise could meet the language requirements will be scrambling to get testing and accreditation done during this short window because of COVID-19 related shutdowns. 

It is crucial that in this moment we assert that all of us are essential. All migrants, no matter what kind of work we do, waged or unwaged, must be included. Permanent resident status is not a gift or a prize to be earned – it is the only way to ensure equality of rights and access to basic services. Anything less permits and produces inequality. 

If you are a migrant who fulfills the criteria below you may be able to apply for permanent resident status. But remember, we won this because of collective action, and we cannot stop until we win STATUS FOR ALL. 


Here’s what migrants are saying

“For us undocumented migrant workers, we know that our work is truly essential. So it is disappointing to see that in this announcement we are excluded. When the government does not address the temporary migrant workers program’s fundamental issue, these changes, although welcomed, indeed fall short of the aspirations of ALL migrants and advocates. It simply reinforces the existing neoliberal agenda within the Canadian immigration system.” 

– Marisol B. Migrante Canada

“Undocumented people like me work on the frontlines in long-term care homes, caring for the sick and the elderly, and in many other essential jobs. Why are we being excluded? Without permanent resident status, we are shut out of healthcare, even the COVID19 vaccine, we can’t defend ourselves against bad bosses, and we live in constant fear of detention and deportation”. 

– Lily, Caregivers Action Centre

“For the first time, some seasonal agricultural workers may have a path to permanent resident status, but the requirement for passing a high level English test excludes the majority of us. This is discrimination. They call us essential, but they continue to exclude us. We demand status for all.”

– Gabriel Flores, Migrant Workers Alliance for Change 

“As essential workers we do permanent work and therefore we should be granted FULL and PERMANENT IMMIGRATION STATUS so we can bring our family the soonest in Canada and be reunited, especially with our children who needed our guidance as their parents. We give so much of our life to improve Canada’s economy by serving our Canadian employers with the best of our service even though we missed our family back home. We shouldn’t wait any longer – full and permanent immigration status for all migrants now!” 

– Judy, Vancouver Committee for Domestic Workers and Caregivers Rights

“The immigration program announcement excludes migrant student workers like me who do not meet these narrow and arbitrary requirements. We have seen over and over that the government can make changes but is choosing not to make the necessary changes that we all deserve. All migrant and undocumented people deserve full and permanent immigration status! “

– Sashanna, Migrant Students United

 


 

55 years. Enough is enough.

Posted on March 31, 2021

Today, March 31st, is the 55th anniversary of the Seasonal Agricultural Workers Program (SAWP). Today marks over half a century of injustice, indignities and exploitation of Black and Latinx people by Canada’s agri-food industry.

This brutality has always been met with organized opposition. The first recorded wildcat strike organized by migrant farm workers was in 1967, less than a year after the program was created. 

Today hundreds of farmworker members of Migrant Workers Alliance for Change are holding simultaneous meetings at 80+ farms to light candles of resistance and make plans to fight for Full and Permanent Immigration Status for All. 

You can support this massive show of worker power by sharing a photo of your own flame of resistance posting online and tagging us on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook with #StatusforAll. Speak out today and pledge to support our upcoming four days of action in 2021. 

SAWP followed the creation of the Caribbean Domestic Workers scheme in 1955. These two programs laid the foundation for temporariness in the immigration system. Subsequent governments have only grown these programs.

Now, over 850,000 temporary study and work permits are issued in Canada each year. Most people on these programs are low-waged and racialized. We live and work here but are excluded from labour rights, healthcare, access to education and other social supports. We are separated from our families. Most of us can never get permanent residency and are forced to stay in Canada without any immigration status, and even fewer rights. 

Enough is enough. Today on the 55th anniversary of the SAWP program, we demand an end to temporariness. We demand an equal society and that means permanent immigration status for everyone. 

In 2021, we are taking actions for Status for All and we need you. Join us: 

  • May 9th (Mothers’ Day)
  • June 20th (Fathers Day)
  • July 18-25 (Non-Status March from Montreal to Ottawa) 
  • September 18th (Parliament returns)

As Hady Anne for Solidarity Across Borders in Montreal said this weekend announcing the March to Ottawa: “We are not here to talk about what is possible… We are here to talk about what human dignity and justice require, what we must do to stop the destruction of the world. From 18 July to 25 July, we will take the road to Ottawa to demand Status for All. Mr. Trudeau, we are tired of waiting. We’re coming.” 

Are you with us? Go to your social media today and light your flame of resistance. 

PS: Following the murders in Atlanta of 8 people including Asian women sex workers, our member Butterfly: Asian Migrant Sex Worker project has launched #8CallsforJustice. Please sign on as an organization or individual: https://www.butterflysw.org/8callsforjustice 

A year of closed borders

Posted on March 18, 2021

One year ago today, at 12:01am on March 18, 2020, Canada closed its borders. Today, they remain closed for many including refugees, migrant workers, families and international students. 

On March 16, 2020, as the COVID crisis was first hitting, we at the Migrant Rights Network called for healthcare, worker rights, income support, access to social services, and immigration status for migrant and undocumented people. 

12 months later, we look back and we look ahead. With you, we vow to keep organizing and fighting for full and permanent immigration status for all. 

(1) HEALTHCARE FOR ALL: As COVID-19 raged through 2020, migrants won policies in many provinces to ensure access to healthcare and COVID testing. But in many places these policies are not being implemented and migrants continue to be turned away or charged high fees for life-saving care. Today, we are calling on all provinces and the federal government to put in place concrete measures to ensure safe and dignified access without fear to COVID19 vaccinations.

(2) WORKER PROTECTIONS & INCOME SUPPORTS: As a result of our work, the Canada Emergency Response Benefit (CERB) was extended to migrants, a valid Social Insurance Number was made mandatory part way through 2020 to qualify for the Canada Recovery Benefit (CRB). Now with tax season approaching, many migrants are scared of a clawback they cannot afford. We demand a CERB/CRB amnesty. Without income support, migrant people either faced starvation and eviction, or were forced to work in dangerous and sometimes deadly conditions. Farmworkers, care workers, delivery workers, cleaners and other low-wage workers are called ‘essential’ even as we are excluded from essential rights and protections. But we take care of us: Migrants fundraised, set up mutual aid networks and stepped in when governments failed us. Migrants stood up against bad bosses, organized strikes and raised our voices. We will continue to organize for justice and equality.

(3) STATUS FOR ALL: Fundamentally, a fair society with equal rights for all requires that everyone have the same immigration status. This is why migrants organized over 30 rallies, protests and marches calling for Full & Permanent Immigration Status for All. In early 2020, the federal government announced a moratorium on deportations because of the pandemic. But the callous practice of deportation continues: by the end of 2020, Canada had deported more people in 2020 than in the previous 5 years. Just this week, a man who contracted COVID while in immigrartion detention was deported despite showing symptoms. Throughout, migrants organized in detention centers, and in Quebec, many secured their own release. Migrant student workers denounced government policies that punished them for the pandemic by letting their permits run out. They won new work permits, a one-time stopgap to the deportation of 52,000 people. But immigration rules continue to exclude low-waged working class people, particularly undocumented workers and those on employer controlled indentureship permits.

(4) SOCIAL SUPPORTS: While some federal, provincial and municipal supports went towards emergency food boxes, it was primarily donations from people like you that allowed migrant groups to feed communities without work. Poor and working class migrants were only able to ward off evictions, get healthcare, childcare or social supports when we united with our neighbors and co-workers to offer real solidarity in the face of deadly policies.

A year into this pandemic, let us re-commit to building a different future together. Talk to your neighbours, friends and co-workers. Raise your voice. Echo and amplify the demands of migrant and undocumented people. Let us build a just world for all of us. 

Vaccines for All!

Posted on January 26, 2021

Take action now to ensure dignified and free access to vaccines for all without fear

Dance Dance for Status for All!

Posted on January 25, 2021

Online Dance Party for Status for All!

~Performances~
~DJs~
~Dress up / Mask Up / Or Keep your Videos Off~
~Invite your friends~
~Dance in your living room~

Join us in joy, in celebration, with love for our liberation. Let’s move together to ensure full and permanent immigration status for all.

+++++
WHEN: Saturday, January 30, 2021
12pm Van, 1pm Edmonton, 2pm Winnipeg, 3pm Toronto, 4pm Halifax.
WHERE: Wherever YOU are!
+++++
Register now: https://us02web.zoom.us/…/tZYudOuspzoqE9MMdYd2U8xGGS4LL…
Your information will be kept private, and never shared with anyone.

Our Day, 2020 (International Migrants Day)

Posted on December 18, 2020

Today is International Migrants Day, 2020. 

For us migrants, 2020 has been a human rights catastrophe. We’ve been on the front line of the COVID crisis, doing the lowest paid and most dangerous jobs growing and delivering food, cleaning buildings, and taking care of children and the elderly. At the same time, many of us have been excluded from even basic healthcare and income support in a pandemic. We have grieved as our families around the world have suffered the impacts of the coronavirus. Impacts that worsen as countries like Canada hoard the vaccine, while those in the Global South go without. 

2020 is also the year of our courage. In the face of hunger and sickness, together with you, we raised our voices and our fists. This is the year that: 

  • Immigration detainees in Laval detention centre went on hunger strike till they were released;
  • Migrant farmworkers in the face of outbreaks walked off jobs, marched on their bosses, demanded their rights and refused to be silent even when they were fired; 
  • Migrant care workers refused to be locked up, surveilled and mistreated; 
  • Migrant students began to organize as migrant workers demanding rights and status;
  • Migrant sex workers, undocumented people, and others took action on May 1, June 14, July 4, August 23, September 20, and November 1, unmasked and undeterred by detentions and deportations; and
  • We won numerous changes to immigration and border policies to ensure our rights. 

Take Action by Joining Our Call for Status for All!


The Migrant Rights Network is Canada’s first and only cross-country alliance of racialized migrant-led organizations. In addition to our collective actions focused on federal changes, our nearly 50 member organizations in 10 provinces fought for access to healthcare, social assistance, and worker rights at provincial and municipal levels winning necessary changes. We raised hundreds of thousands dollars to distribute food and essential supplies to migrants struggling in times of COVID-19. 

We launched two years ago today. In our founding statement we wrote: “Immigration policies separate us. Government policies polarize and divide us. We are given different rights on the basis of the places of our birth, the colour of our skin, the accents we have, and the bodies we inhabit. We are denied labour protections, decent healthcare, the ability to change jobs, and to be with our families. We reject these categories of migrant, irregular, refugee, undocumented, citizen. We assert our humanity.”

We assert our collective humanity by rejecting the systems of temporary and undocumented migration through which 1 in 23 people in Canada are without basic rights because they don’t have permanent resident status. Status for All has been a call of many of our organizations for decades, but it is only in 2020 that we have consolidated ourselves into a single campaign with the support of over 400 organizations, and 22,000 people. We are not simply calling for immigration reform. Full and permanent immigration status for all is a call for fundamental transformation of our economic and social systems away from profit and exploitation and towards social liberation and care. It is a rejection of war, capitalist exploitation and climate policies that force migrants to leave our homes in the first place. 

Despite the myriad crises of 2020, we have succeeded not just in winning changes to laws and taking care of our communities, but many of our organizations have succeeded in deepening democratic leadership and mass participation of migrants in our work. Together, we are organizing our section of the working class. We are doing so in alliance with Indigenous, labour, climate and other movements. 

As we end 2020, we urge you to stay organized. Join actions and meetings at work and in your community to build organizations capable of meeting the coming moment. We cannot and will not return to the old normal. Let us make 2021 a year where we build the world we deserve to live in.

Together, we will win!


July 4 – Montreal

July 4 – Toronto

July 4 – Richmond

August 23 – Windsor

August 23 – Vancouver

August 23 – Toronto

August 23 – Sudbury

August 23 – Sherbrooke

August 23 – Regina

August 23 – Niagara

August 23 – Montreal

August 23 – Halifax

September 20 – Toronto

September 20 – St Johns

September 20 – Sudbury

September 20 – Vancouver

September 20 – St Catharines

September 20 – Montreal

September 20 – Halifax

September 20 – Hamilton

September 20 – Kelowna

September 20 – Vancouver

November 1 – Montreal

November 1 – Vancouver

November 1 – Toronto

November 1 – Sherbrooke

November 1 – Niagara

Second Wave, Same Crisis

Posted on November 19, 2020

We are eight months into a pandemic and yet it feels like we are back at the beginning. 

Yet again, there are COVID-19 outbreaks affecting migrant workers on farms. Yet again, migrant and undocumented people are losing jobs as regions shut down. And still no action to save lives and livelihoods. 

Any day now, the federal government will release its ‘fiscal update’, a sort of mini-budget which will outline the government’s plan to ensure a just recovery. We already know their priorities: all but the Green Party this week voted against an NDP motion to create a 1% tax on individual wealth over $20 million. 

It is crucial that decision makers hear from you that there can be no just recovery without full and permanent immigration status for all. Click here to call PM Trudeau’s office to tell them you expect migrant justice to be on the agenda.

But we must also share this same message with our neighbours and friends. A recent poll showed that 40% of respondents in Canada want to reduce permanent immigration numbers. We need to explain to our friends and families that migrants are an essential part of the fabric of communities, and reducing immigration means reducing rights for our friends and neighbours [click here to share on facebook, and twitter. Scroll below to download and share on instagram].

Tens of thousands have lost their jobs as the second wave of COVID-19 ravages migrant and racialized communities. Some that have fallen sick from COVID-19 report not being allowed to return to work even when they have recovered. 

Instead of supporting these essential members of our communities and taxing COVID-19 profiteers, federal laws deny migrants without a valid Social Insurance Number, particularly undocumented people, access to the Canada Recovery Benefit. 

Undocumented people and those awaiting their immigration permit renewals don’t have healthcare in most provinces and must pay up front. This includes students, workers and refugees numbering in the tens of thousands. Even COVID-19 testing and treatment is exorbitantly expensive.

Migrant farmworkers are again falling sick in new COVID-19 outbreaks, just as the season is ending, preventing workers from returning home. Sick workers are missing flights. Those stuck in Canada are without work, wages or income support, abandoned in unheated housing as winter sets in. 

Migrant care workers are either trapped in employers’ homes working longer hours without pay, or being laid off again in this second wave. Instead of supporting them, the federal government just shut down the home care worker path to permanent residency for 2020. 

Migrant students continue to pay high tuition fees but don’t have access to essential supports and services. Those that have graduated and are working in essential but low-waged jobs are not allowed to apply for permanent residency. Their permits are expiring but the federal government still hasn’t made them renewable, meaning thousands face deportation before year-end. 

Instead of supporting migrants and ensuring permanent immigration status for all, the federal government is devoting resources to detaining and deporting people during a global pandemic. This week, friends and supporters of long-term care home worker Mamadou Konaté rallied to stop his deportation. Ebrahim Toure was detained and released a second time and is facing deportation to Gambia just days after his baby is due, after immigration enforcement used false documents to get him a passport. His crime? Pirating DVDs.

If there is one thing this pandemic has revealed is that there can be no return to the way things were. And that means that the immigration system – and the racism and exploitation on which it is based and which it perpetuates – must be completely overhauled.  

Right now, PM Trudeau is working on a plan to recover from COVID-19. He needs to hear from you that this plan must include dollars behind full and permanent immigration status for all. Status for all is the only way to ensure equal access to rights and protections. Make the call. We don’t have a minute to lose. 


Download and share these images on Instagram. 






Behind Closed Doors: Exposing Migrant Care Worker Exploitation During COVID-19

Posted on October 28, 2020

Racialized migrant care workers from across Canada are speaking out about the exploitation they have faced during COVID-19, and calling on the federal government to ensure full and permanent immigration status for all.

TAKE ACTION TO SUPPORT MIGRANT CARE WORKERS!
Sign the petition for Status for All | Join an action on November 1st or 2nd near you

Watch the video and then scroll below to read the report

Behind Closed Doors: Exposing Migrant Care Worker Exploitation During COVID-19

The shocking new report, which compiles hundreds of surveys filled out by migrant care workers during COVID-19, tells a story of entrapment, long hours, and thousands of dollars in stolen wages. It shows the enormous power employers have to abuse and exploit, and the ways in which migrant women are refusing to be silent.

Read the press release with key highlights of the report here.

Authored by Caregivers Action Centre, Vancouver Committee for Domestic Worker and Caregiver Rights, Caregiver Connection Education and Support Organization and Migrant Workers Alliance for Change, the report is endorsed by the Alberta Careworkers Association, PINAY Quebec, Migrante Canada, Migrante Alberta, and Association for the Rights of Household and Farm Workers (ADDPD/ARHW).

Click here to download the report

Day of the Dead Celebrations for Status for All!

Posted on October 9, 2020

On November 1st and 2nd, communities across the country took action online and on the streets to honor migrants that have lost their lives to COVID-19 and unjust immigration laws and call for full and permanent immigration status for all. We are in the second wave of the virus, but support and services for essential migrants are missing. Migrant workers, students, refugees, undocumented people, sex workers and others are being turned away from healthcare, emergency income supports, decent work, and other basic services at a time when we need it the most. Fees for education and other services are incredibly high. We are fighting FULL & PERMANENT IMMIGRATION STATUS FOR ALL, join us!

Add your name! Sign the petition

In Montreal, over a 100 people organized through Solidarity Across Borders braved the rain and cold and did a die-in outside CBC / Radio Canada offices. Watch live stream here.


In Niagara, organizers and workers from the Migrant Workers Alliance for Change held a vigil at the site where Zenaida, one of our farmworker leaders, died last year, watch the live stream here. Then, organizers and workers created an altar at the offices of local Liberal MP, Chris Bittle’s office.


In Sherbrooke Collectif ENSEMBLE avec les personnes MIGRANTES CONTRE le RACISME rallied outside of Minister Marie-Claude Bibeau’s office. Organizers and individuals were invited to sign the petition and join the campaign.


In Toronto member organizations of the Migrant Workers Alliance for Change led by LatinX members created an altar for workers that have lost their lives and called for Status for All. See photos here, and CBC Toronto’s report on the action here.

CBC Toronto reporting on our #DayoftheDead altar this weekend in Toronto.

We honour the dead. We fight for the living.
We need #StatusforAll to stop the deaths.

Take action with us: https://t.co/y9KjMbYsEf pic.twitter.com/heCFu5hUMx

— Migrant Workers Alliance for Change (@MWACCanada) November 3, 2020


Over 100 people gathered in Vancouver coordinated by Sanctuary Health and Committee for Domestic Worker and Caregiver Rights to call for Status for All! See more photos here.


In Sudbury, the Sudbury Workers Education and Action Centre organized a community gathering and meeting. Read more about it in the Sudbury Star here and in Halifax, the Migrant Worker Rights Working Group organized a film screening of El Contrato. Read an op-ed from the working group here.

At the same time, dozens of national organizations across the country issued social media statements in support of #StatusforAll. Search for #StatusforAll on all platforms to see all the groups speaking up!

 

Full & Permanent Immigration Status for All

Posted on September 14, 2020

280+ groups are issuing a joint letter calling for immigration rights for all migrant and undocumented people. Add your name!

Sep 20: Day of Action for Status for All!

Posted on September 2, 2020

From September 18-20, 2020, just days before politicians return to Parliament, a single message echoed from St. John’s to Vancouver and Montreal to Sudbury; from migrant workers, refugees, undocumented people, international students and allies: we demand full and permanent immigration status for all now.

Add your name! Just 24 hours till Parliament returns!


Vancouver – CDWCR and Sanctuary Health dropped banners over major highways and intersections.
Kelowna – RAMA dropped banners over major highways and intersections.
40+ people marched to MP Filomena Tassi’s office in Hamilton.
Hundreds of people marched in Montreal, insisting that no one should be left behind (read on La Presse)
Migrant students in St John’s did an online action for #Status for All. International students spoke out on CBC.
Banner drop in Halifax 
Posters covered MP Chris Biddle’s office in St Catharines (read more in The Standard)
Migrants gathered at MP offices in Sudbury to call for Status for All (read more in Sudbury Star)
In Toronto, rallies at the four corners of Yonge & Dundas brought migrants together for a single-tier immigration system (read more at CBC).

This Wednesday, the Trudeau government will announce its priorities and its plan for the new session of Parliament. Opposition parties will have to decide where they stand and who they are willing to fight for. We have no time to lose. We need you to help us get louder! Take action by calling on PM Trudeau to ensure Status for All.

We have seen how the economic and social crisis that came to a head with COVID-19 has forced millions into deeper poverty and economic exploitation, while leaving the richest few unscathed. There can be no recovery without undoing the economic, political, and social systems that produced these inequalities. And that means a full overhaul of an immigration system that has tipped the scales against racialized migrants for so long. A fair society, a just society, means full immigration status now. 

But no matter what happens this week, we will keep organizing for justice. Each of us has a role to play. We must bring more people into the movement because it is only together that we will win.


August 23 Day of Action for Status for All in 11 Cities

Posted on August 4, 2020

Pickets, rallies and actions took place in BC, Nova Scotia, Ontario, Saskatchewan and Quebec for Status for All on August 23!

In Halifax, posters welcoming migrants were put up in different areas (CTV). Four simultaneous celebratory marches took place in Montreal through migrant neighbourhoods (La Presse). In Niagara, activists gathered at the local detention centre (St Catharine Standard). In Regina, picketers at the local MPs office called for status for migrants students in particular (Regina Post). Dozens joined a rally in Sherbrooke (La Tribune). In Sudbury, refugees and asylum seekers took action (CTV). Hundreds gathered in Toronto to set up a human clock at downtown immigration offices (Canadian Press). Over 60 people joined a rally in Windsor calling for rights and status (Windsor Star). Actions also took place in Vancouver, Ottawa, and Okanagan.


HALIFAX

MAINSTREAM MEDIA COVERAGE

  • CTV: https://twitter.com/NOII_HFX/status/1297885046200819718 
  • Radio-Canada: https://twitter.com/NOII_HFX/status/1298261004745244672

PHOTOS, VIDEOS, LIVESTREAM

  • Photos: https://twitter.com/NOII_HFX/status/1297626877444739080
  • Photos: https://twitter.com/NOII_HFX/status/1297630458948321280

MONTREAL

MAINSTREAM MEDIA COVERAGE

  • La Presse, “Plusieurs manifestations pour un statut pour tous à Montréal”: https://www.lapresse.ca/actualites/grand-montreal/2020-08-23/plusieurs-manifestations-pour-un-statut-pour-tous-a-montreal.php
  • CTV Montreal, “Immigrants, advocates maintain pressure to expand residency program for front line workers”: https://montreal.ctvnews.ca/immigrants-advocates-maintain-pressure-to-expand-residency-program-for-front-line-workers-1.5076323?cache=yes%2F5-things-to-know-for-friday-november-15-2019-1.4687011 

NIAGARA

MAINSTREAM MEDIA COVERAGE

  • St Catharines Standard (Multiple newspapers), “Migrant worker rally calls for Status for All”: https://www.wellandtribune.ca/news/niagara-region/2020/08/23/migrant-worker-rally-calls-for-status-for-all.html

PHOTOS, VIDEOS, LIVESTREAM

  • One Dish, One Mic
    https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=618610968844795&extid=I9A7DJVrMTC4k2eK (rally)
    https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=764866890721879&extid=QaLpDhvxcmNH4zeA (march)

OTTAWA

PHOTOS, VIDEOS, LIVESTREAM

  • https://drive.google.com/file/d/1Wui7aqjFA7zERKfg8MH5NqkMsZdAbs7v/view?usp=sharing 

REGINA

MAINSTREAM MEDIA COVERAGE

  • Regina Leaders-Post, “URSU calling for permanent resident status for international students”: https://leaderpost.com/news/local-news/ursu-calling-for-permanent-resident-status-for-international-students

SHERBROOKE

MAINSTREAM MEDIA COVERAGE (in french)

  • La Tribune, “Ensemble pour les personnes migrantes”: Ensemble pour les personnes migrantes | Actualités
  • Also in La Tribune, an open letter we had published before the rally, “Tous et toutes essentiel.le.s”: Tous et toutes essentiel.le.s! | Opinions
  • EstriePlus.com, an online regional media, “Un rassemblement pour les droits de migrants“: Un rassemblement pour les droits de migrants – ACTUALITÉS – Estrie – Estrieplus.com – Le journal Internet
  • 107,7 FM, mainstream right-wing radio, interview with Fritzna, a member of our collective: Rassemblement pour réclamer un statut d’immigration complet et permanent pour tous | Entrevue avec Fritzna Blaise, qui était sur place hier
  • Le Téléjournal Estrie, Radio-Canada (CBC) TV (briefly, starting at 17min42sec in the video): INTEGRALE WEB 18H-TJ Estrie | ICI
  • NVL Estrie, Noovo TV (starting at 1min30): NVL – Saison 4 – NVL Estrie, 27 août 2020

PHOTOS, VIDEOS, LIVESTREAM

  • A few pictures on our collective’s facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/Ensemble.Collectif/posts/1039073396526843

SUDBURY

MAINSTREAM MEDIA COVERAGE

  • CTV News, “Seeking permanent immigration status for all” http://ctv.news/WBtnMuO
  • Sudbury.com, “Status for all: Asylum seekers in Sudbury join national call for permanent residency”: https://www.sudbury.com/local-news/status-for-all-asylum-seekers-in-sudbury-join-national-call-for-permanent-residency-2659790  

TORONTO

MAINSTREAM MEDIA COVERAGE

  • Canadian Press (Multiple Outlets), “Demonstrators gather to protest treatment of migrant workers amid pandemic”: https://www.cp24.com/news/demonstrators-gather-to-protest-treatment-of-migrant-workers-amid-pandemic-1.5076150
  • CityTV Toronto (Video), “Rally held for full status for migrant workers”: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A2tk3GCocRw
  • Radio-Canada, “On exige un plan élargi de régularisation migratoire au Canada”: https://www.rcinet.ca/fr/2020/08/24/on-exige-un-plan-elargi-de-regularisation-migratoire-au-canada/ 
  • Ming-Pao, “全加10個城市集會爭取解決因疫情滯留外勞身分160萬人貢獻社會卻沒醫保不公”: http://www.mingpaocanada.com/tor/htm/News/20200824/tbc1_r.htm
  • The Philippine Reporter, “Migrant workers, refugees, undocumented, foreign students demand landed status”:  https://philippinereporter.com/index.php/2020/08/28/migrant-workers-refugees-undocumented-foreign-students-demand-landed-status/

PHOTOS, VIDEOS, LIVESTREAM

  • Live Stream of Toronto August 23 DoA for #StatusforAll (45 minutes): https://www.facebook.com/MigrantWorkersAlliance/videos/4359080987466962
  • Twitter thread with photos from #StatusforAll action in Toronto: https://twitter.com/MWACCanada/status/1297616153725079554
  • Photos from #StatusforAll action in Toronto: https://www.facebook.com/MigrantWorkersAlliance/posts/3294155737330803 
  • FB Photos from #StatusforAll action in Toronto on August 23rd: https://www.facebook.com/caregiversaction/photos/pcb.2764992343757951/2764989117091607/

VANCOUVER

PHOTOS, VIDEOS, LIVESTREAM

  • https://www.facebook.com/SanctuaryHealth/posts/3118648744856018

WINDSOR

MAINSTREAM MEDIA COVERAGE

  • CTV, “Advocates call for pathway to citizenship for migrant workers, foreign students”: https://windsor.ctvnews.ca/advocates-call-for-pathway-to-citizenship-for-migrant-workers-foreign-students-1.5076005 
  • Windsor Star, “Citizens rally for improved rights for migrant workers”: https://windsorstar.com/news/local-news/citizens-rally-for-improved-rights-for-migrant-workers

 

July 4 Cross-Country Day of Action for Status for All!

Posted on June 27, 2020

Demand full immigration status for all: undocumented migrants, temporary foreign workers, careworkers, international students, refugees. Young or old, working or not, criminalized or not. End the systemic racism! Equal people means equal migration status!


ACTION IN MANY CITIES

  • MONTREAL: 11am. Place Émilie Gamelin; TORONTO: 3pm. 511 Lawrence West; PICTON: 5pm, 280 Main Street; RICHMOND: 12pm, 3251 Chatham


Mass Digital Rally for Full Immigration Status for All

Posted on May 31, 2020

Together, migrants from across Canada will raise our voice for healthcare, decent work, family unity and equal rights for all. We demand full immigration status.

Migrants are the Food Chain – We Sustain the World

Posted on May 8, 2020

Share: Facebook – Twitter – Instagram – Online
Sign our petition!

This public health pandemic has shown us which people are essential to sustaining life. We now know who ensures we are fed and taken care of: migrant and undocumented workers.

And it is these same workers that are being left out of rights and protections. The largest COVID-19 outbreak in North America is taking place right now at the Cargill meat processing facility in Alberta, with another massive outbreak at JBS meat processing nearby. Many of those infected are current or former migrant workers. These plants must be closed until workers are protected. 

J.J. is a current migrant worker at JBS, which has remained open despite 566 workers testing positive for COVID-19. He has this message to share with you: “We are concerned about going back to work. JBS keeps on calling us to go back. We are not sure if the workplace is safe. Our status is Temporary Foreign Worker. We are afraid that we will be terminated and sent back home if we take a leave of absence because of our safety. Or that they might not process our papers – our visa and work permit will expire in October.”

Food processing is one part of the food chain. From food production, to processing, to retail, cleaning and delivery – each link in this chain is held up by migrants. Canada is the world’s sixth largest exporter of agri-food – migrant and undocumented workers here feed the rest of the planet. And while the federal government has given at least $477 million in aid to agri-food businesses just in the last 5 weeks – without requiring them to pass on a single cent of this money to workers – migrants are being denied healthcare, income support, basic worker protections and permanent resident status. 

These are their stories. Read them, and share them with your friends and family on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram or forward this website to a friend. Remember: Migrant and undocumented workers are essential. We are the food chain. We sustain the world. 

MIGRANTS GROW OUR FOOD

“If a worker is working in an environment which is risky and refuses to work, the employer wants to send him back to his country or suspend him. They treat us like slaves here, it’s like we have no rights. The boss is more concerned about the products than the workers.“

Andrae, migrant greenhouse worker from Jamaica, member of Migrant Workers Alliance – Niagara. 

MIGRANT PACKAGE OUR FOOD 

“I hope they close [the plant] to be able to clean it. I’m afraid of going to work. They changed our shift schedule. They combined two shifts into one – now there are lots of us in the locker room. Social distancing cannot be practiced at the work stations.” 

  • J.G, a migrant worker at JBS, member of Migrante Alberta.

MIGRANTS WORK IN GROCERY STORES

“I’ve been working at the grocery store for more than 5 years, it’s never been like what it is like today. Everyone is scared and worried, but we just keep working. I heard the government said we would get a raise, but then I learned it doesn’t include grocery store workers and I just don’t get it. Are we not frontline workers too?” 

  • Mr. Chen, migrant grocery store worker, member of Chinese Canadian National Council – Toronto 

MIGRANTS CLEAN GROCERY STORES

“I have been working for 1 year in a downtown grocery store, 7 days a week, no day off. The company pays me $13/hour (but the minimum wage is $14), they didn’t pay me holidays, or pay on sick days. The company said if I’m sick, I have to stop working. They don’t provide plastic gloves or masks and I’m using a lot of chemicals to disinfect everything. I don’t have choice because I need money to survive.”

Rocio Ramirez, undocumented worker, member of Workers Action Centre 

MIGRANTS DELIVER OUR FOOD

“I have been working full time as a delivery driver for 7 years. Right now, restaurants won’t let us use the washroom so we can’t wash our hands. As bare minimum in the crisis, the company should give masks, gloves and hand sanitizer – to protect us and customers too. But they aren’t. Everybody wants to get food delivered, but we have to keep working for $4.50/order.“

John, migrant food courier

 

Full Immigration Status for All – for a Just Recovery from COVID-19

Posted on May 7, 2020

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We demand Status for All and Landed Status Now – this is essential for a just recovery from COVID-19.

  • This means, everyone in the country without permanent resident status must be regularized and given permanent resident status immediately. This includes all low-waged residents including migrant workers, study permit holders, refugee claimants, people who were ordered deported as failed refugees, people who lost their status because of exclusions for criminality, people who overstayed their visas, and who entered Canada without a permit. 
  • All people who come to Canada in the future must have permanent resident status on arrival. Migrants in low-waged occupations currently coming into Canada through the Temporary Foreign Workers Program, Caregiver Program, Seasonal Agricultural Workers Program and other programs with work authorization permits, as well as refugees and individuals on study permits, should be able to come to Canada as permanent residents if they so choose, and be able to bring their families with them. 

Status for All & Landed Status Now is pragmatic, possible and necessary. Here is why:

(1) Status for All is what migrants want.

Since at least 1968, migrant worker rights groups organizing with domestic workers, caregivers, seasonal agricultural workers, and temporary foreign workers (back then known as the Non-Immigrant Employment Authorization Program) have unified around a single demand: full immigration status on landing for migrant workers. Since at least 2001, groups of undocumented residents already living and working in Canada have been calling for status for all in an ongoing campaign. Today, Migrant Rights Network members are unified around this demand. COVID-19 has shown us that it is migrants and undocumented workers that are essential to sustaining societies and communities, and that denial of permanent resident status excludes us from basic rights and protections even during a pandemic. 

(2) Status for All ensures rights for everyone.

Canadian immigration policy divides us into two categories: those who arrive with permanent immigration status, and those who don’t. Those who don’t are largely racialized and low-waged. We are all a part of the community; we are workers, students, refugees and families. Sometimes we are disabled, or face risk if we leave Canada. Many of us aren’t able to maintain our temporary status, and as a result, hundred of thousands of us have become undocumented. Without  full immigration status, we are denied healthcare, decent work, and emergency supports. We are separated from our families for many years. Full Immigration Status for All is our campaign to call for equal rights for ourselves. 

Many low-waged migrants are tied to a single employer. Others are not allowed to work, or are restricted to certain industries or hours of work. Migrants in sex work are criminalized. These policies allow bad bosses to pay migrants less, make us work harder and in more dangerous jobs. Migrants are either directly excluded from labour protections, or labour laws are not responsive to our specific vulnerability to abuse under threat of deportation. Full access to healthcare, education, pensions, employment insurance and other social entitlements is denied to those without permanent resident status. 

These inequalities, which are built into the system, have been fully exposed during the COVID-19 crisis – some of the people most vulnerable to COVID-19 and most often denied government support are migrant and undocumented people. 

Full Immigration Status for All is a comprehensive and effective solution to ending the differential treatment of migrants, ensuring we all get basic social entitlements. Status for All will protect wages and working conditions for all workers. Status for All ensures equal access to healthcare, services and social protections for everyone, and therefore ensures better public health for all residents.

Making Status for All a reality.

There is a long history of regularization programs around the world, including in Canada. Canada has created programs to grant undocumented or migrant people permanent residency multiple times in recent decades. In fact, there is currently a regularization program underway for undocumented construction workers in the GTA.

As we respond to COVID-19, we propose the following steps towards Full Immigration Status for All: 

  • First, the federal government should meet with migrant organizations like ours in order to develop an effective and appropriate plan; 
  • Second, a moratorium on detentions and deportations should be instituted to ensure undocumented people applying for status are protected; 
  • Third, a regularization process should be created where all migrants in the country get permanent residence status or citizenship, without any exclusions by work history, previous immigration status, health status, previous access to social assistance, criminality, or any other language, education or personal history reasons
    • During this time, all undocumented and migrant residents in Canada should get immediate and open work authorization and full access to basic entitlements;
  • Fourth, all low-waged workers arriving in Canada in the future should arrive with Permanent Resident status if they so choose.  

A regularization program is extremely urgent. Our communities cannot wait. We simultaneously demand comprehensive social entitlements, rights and protections that permanent residency guarantees including:

  • Healthcare for all; 
  • Family unity;
  • Full labour rights and protections for all, including open work authorization without any employer, hours of work or industry restrictions (such as essential sectors or ban on working in businesses related to sex-trade); 
  • Equal access without restriction, differential fees or fear to Employment Insurance, pensions, social assistance, workers’ compensation, emergency income supports, settlement services and all other social services, and  workers’ compensation, and education at all levels. 
  • End to racism, xenophobia and discrimination. 

We also call for changes to the existing immigration programs in the interim and a removal of all educational, language, age employer job letter, medical or other admissibility requirements that restrict access to permanent residency. 

Status for All is not the same as ‘Pathway to Permanent Residence’. A ‘pathway’ already exists for some temporary residents (care workers, students, refugees, etc), and these are not pathways but minefields of abuse. ‘Pathways’ are multi-step processes in which migrants must remain temporary for years while jumping through hoops to try to meet limited and restrictive criteria, and only then they may have the chance to access permanent residency. Migrant care workers and farmworkers have a pathway – but it includes educational and language requirements that are impossible to meet. These programs retain all the problems inherent in temporary immigration status. They divide migrants between those considered deserving and not deserving. They discriminate against poor migrants. We do not need more temporariness. We need permanent resident Status for All. 

Status for All envisions Just Recovery for All. 

Many people around the world are forced to leave their homes because of war and conflict, climate change, economic uncertainty, or mega-industrial projects that displace communities. Therefore, our campaign for Status for All includes a call to end wars, climate change, economic injustices and all other policies and practices that force people to migrate. We strongly support the right of people to stay in their own communities, and the right of people to return home without fear. Status for All is based in respect for Indigenous self-determination here and around the world. Status for All calls for decent work, universal access to services for all people, regardless of immigration status.  

Today, many high-wage workers and rich people have the option of coming to Canada permanently and quickly. Status for All will give low-waged, racialized, workers – many of them women, all of them essential – access to stability and dignity.

 

Un statut d’immigration complet pour tous et toutes – pour une juste relance après la COVID-19

Nous exigeons le statut de résidence permanente pour tous et toutes maintenant – c’est essentiel pour une juste relance après la COVID-19.
Cela signifie que toute personne au pays qui se trouve sans statut de résidence permanente doit être régularisée et recevoir immédiatement le statut de résidence permanente. Cela comprend l’ensemble des résident.e.s à bas salaire, y compris les travailleur.euse.s migrant.e.s, les titulaires de permis d’études, les demandeur.euse.s d’asile, les personnes réfugiées à qui on a refusé l’asile et qui ont reçu un ordre de déportation, les personnes qui ont perdu leur statut en raison de mesures d’exclusion pour leurs antécédents criminels, les personnes qui ont dépassé la durée de leur visa et qui sont entrées au Canada sans permis.
Toutes les personnes qui viendront au Canada à l’avenir doivent recevoir le statut de résidence permanente dès leur arrivée. Les personnes migrantes occupant des emplois à bas salaire qui entrent actuellement au Canada dans le cadre du Programme des travailleurs étrangers temporaires, du Programme des aides familiaux résidants, du Programme des travailleurs agricoles saisonniers et d’autres programmes avec permis de travail, ainsi que les personnes réfugiées et les personnes titulaires d’un permis d’études, devraient pouvoir venir au Canada en tant que résidentes permanentes si elles le souhaitent et être en mesure d’amener leur famille avec elles.

Un statut de résidence permanente pour tous et toutes maintenant est pragmatique, possible et nécessaire. Voici pourquoi:

(1) Le statut pour tous et toutes est ce que les personnes migrantes veulent.

Depuis au moins 1968, les groupes de défense des droits des travailleur.euse.s migrant.e.s qui s’organisent avec les travailleur.euse.s domestiques, les soignant.e.s, les travailleur.euse.s agricoles saisonniers et les travailleur.euse.s étrangers temporaires (à l’époque connu.e.s sous le nom de (Programme d’autorisation d’emploi des non-immigrants) et se réunissent autour d’une seule revendication : le statut d’immigration complet pour les travailleur.euse.s migrant.e.s dès l’arrivée au pays. Depuis au moins 2001, des groupes de résident.e.s sans papiers vivant et travaillant déjà au Canada réclament un statut pour tous et toutes dans le cadre d’une campagne toujours en cours. Aujourd’hui, les membres du Réseau des droits des migrant.e.s sont uni.e.s autour de cette revendication. La COVID-19 nous a montré que ce sont les travailleur.euse.s migrant.e.s et sans papiers qui sont essentiel.le.s pour soutenir les sociétés et les communautés, et que le refus du statut de résidence permanente nous exclut des droits et protections fondamentaux même pendant une pandémie.

(2) Le statut pour tous et toutes garantit des droits pour tous et toutes.

La politique d’immigration canadienne nous divise en deux catégories: ceux et celles qui arrivent avec un statut d’immigration permanente et ceux et celles qui arrivent sans. Les personnes qui n’ont pas ce statut sont en grande partie racisées et peu rémunérées. Nous faisons tous et toutes partie de la communauté; nous sommes des travailleur.euse.s, des étudiant.e.s, des réfugié.e.s et des familles. Parfois, nous sommes handicapé.e.s ou courons des risques si nous quittons le Canada. Bon nombre d’entre nous ne sont pas en mesure de maintenir notre statut temporaire et, par conséquent, des centaines de milliers d’entre nous sont devenu.e.s sans papiers. Sans statut d’immigration complet, on nous refuse l’accès aux soins de santé, à un travail décent et aux aides d’urgence. Nous sommes séparé.e.s de nos familles depuis de nombreuses années. Le statut d’immigration complet pour tous et toutes constitue notre campagne pour réclamer pour nous-mêmes l’égalité des droits.

Bon nombre de personnes migrantes à bas salaires sont liées à un seul employeur. D’autres ne sont pas autorisées à travailler ou sont limitées à certaines industries ou à certains horaires de travail. Les personnes migrantes travaillant dans l’industrie du sexe sont criminalisées. Ces politiques permettent aux mauvais patrons de moins payer les personnes migrantes, nous obligent à travailler plus dur et nous contraint à des emplois plus dangereux. Les personnes migrantes sont soit directement exclues des protections du travail, soit les lois du travail ne répondent pas à notre vulnérabilité spécifique vis-à-vis des abus sous la menace de l’expulsion. Le plein accès aux soins de santé, à l’éducation, aux pensions de retraite, à l’assurance-emploi et à d’autres droits sociaux est refusé aux personnes sans statut de résidence permanente.

Ces inégalités, qui sont intégrées au système, ont été pleinement exposées pendant la crise de la COVID-19 – certaines des personnes les plus vulnérables à la COVID-19 et le plus souvent privées du soutien du gouvernement sont les personnes migrantes et les sans-papiers.

Le statut d’immigration complet pour tous et toutes est une solution globale et efficace pour mettre fin au traitement différencié des personnes migrantes, garantissant que nous obtenions tous et toutes les droits sociaux de base. Le statut pour tous et toutes protégera les salaires et les conditions de travail de l’ensemble des travailleur.euse.s. Le statut pour tous et toutes garantit l’égalité d’accès aux soins de santé, aux services et aux protections sociales pour tout le monde, et garantit ainsi une meilleure santé publique pour l’ensemble des résident.e.s.

Faire du statut pour tous et toutes une réalité.

Il existe une longue histoire de programmes de régularisation dans le monde, y compris au Canada. Le Canada a créé des programmes pour accorder la résidence permanente aux sans-papiers ou aux migrants à plusieurs reprises au cours des dernières décennies. En fait, un programme de régularisation est actuellement en cours pour les travailleur.euse.s de la construction sans papiers dans la région du Grand Toronto.

En réponse à la COVID-19, nous proposons les étapes suivantes vers un statut d’immigration complet pour tous et toutes :

Premièrement, le gouvernement fédéral doit rencontrer les organisations de personnes migrantes comme la nôtre afin d’élaborer un plan efficace et approprié;
Deuxièmement, un moratoire sur les détentions et les expulsions devrait être imposé pour garantir la protection des personnes sans papiers demandant le statut;
Troisièmement, un processus de régularisation devrait être créé dans le cadre duquel l’ensemble des personnes migrantes du pays obtiennent le statut de résidence permanente ou la citoyenneté, sans aucune exclusion en raison d’antécédents professionnels, du statut d’immigration antérieur, de l’état de santé, de l’accès antérieur à l’aide sociale, d’antécédents criminels, de la langue, de la scolarité ou d’histoires personnelles.
Durant cette période, l’ensemble des résident.e.s sans papiers et migrant.e.s au Canada devraient obtenir une autorisation de travail immédiate et ouverte et un accès complet aux droits de base;
Quatrièmement, l’ensemble des travailleur.euse.s à bas salaire arrivant à l’avenir au Canada devraient avoir le statut de résidence permanente s’ils et elles le souhaitent.

Nous demandons également des changements aux programmes d’immigration existants concernant l’intervalle et la suppression de toutes les conditions d’admissibilité en matière de scolarité, de langue, d’âge, de lettre de référence de l’employeur, de médecine ou autres qui restreignent l’accès à la résidence permanente.

Le statut pour tous et toutes n’est pas la même chose que le «chemin vers la résidence permanente». Un «chemin» existe déjà pour certain.e.s résident.e.s temporaires (travailleur.euse.s soignant.e.s, étudiant.e.s, réfugié.e.s, etc.), et ce ne sont pas des chemins mais des terrains minés d’abus. Les «chemins» sont des processus en plusieurs étapes au cours desquelles les personnes migrantes doivent rester temporaires pendant des années tout en sautillant entre les obstacles pour arriver à répondre à des critères limitatifs et restrictifs, et ce n’est qu’alors qu’elles peuvent avoir la possibilité d’accéder à la résidence permanente. Les travailleur.euse.s migrant.e.s et les travailleur.euse.s agricoles ont un chemin, mais celui-ci comprend des exigences en matière de scolarité et de langue impossibles à satisfaire. Ces programmes conservent tous les problèmes inhérents au statut d’immigration temporaire. Ils divisent les personnes migrantes entre celles qui sont considérées comme méritantes et non méritantes. Ils discriminent les personnes migrantes pauvres. Nous n’avons pas besoin d’un statut qui demeure encore temporaire. Nous avons besoin du statut de résidence permanente pour tous et toutes.

Le statut pour tous et toutes permet d’envisager une juste relance pour tous et toutes.

Bon nombre de personnes à travers le monde sont forcées de quitter leur pays en raison des guerres et des conflits, des changements climatiques, de l’incertitude économique ou de méga-projets industriels qui déplacent des communautés. Par conséquent, notre campagne pour le statut pour tous et toutes comprend un appel à mettre fin aux guerres, aux changements climatiques, aux injustices économiques et à toute autre politique et pratique qui oblige les gens à migrer. Nous soutenons fermement le droit des personnes de rester dans leur propre communauté et le droit des personnes de rentrer sans crainte chez elles. Un statut pour tous et toutes est basé sur le respect de l’autodétermination autochtone ici et dans le monde. Un statut pour tous et toutes exige un travail décent, un accès universel aux services pour tous et toutes, quel que soit le statut d’immigration.

À l’heure actuelle, bon nombre de riches et de travailleur.euse.s à salaire élevé ont la possibilité de s’établir au Canada de manière permanente et rapide. Le statut pour tous et toutes donnera aux travailleur.euse.s à bas salaire et racisé.e.s – dont plusieurs sont des femmes, toutes essentielles – accès à la stabilité et à la dignité.

56 Elected Representatives Write to Federal Government for Migrant & Undocumented Workers

Posted on May 4, 2020

[le français suit]

Add your voice to this call, sign our petition!

Joint statement: We call on the federal government of Canada to immediately ensure that income supports are available to migrant and undocumented workers without valid Social Insurance Numbers. Migrant and undocumented workers are essential workers taking care of our communities – they deserve essential emergency income supports as well as all other social programs and rights to take care of themselves and their families during this crisis.”

50 elected provincial and municipal representatives from each of Canada’s provinces are issuing a statement today calling on the federal government to extend income supports to all migrant and undocumented workers, including those outside the country, in support of a proposal by Migrant Rights Network – Canada’s migrant coalition:

  1. Ensure residents without Social Insurance Numbers have access to Canada Emergency Response Benefit through the provision of accessible Individual Tax Numbers where information is not shared with immigration authorities.
  2. Extend access to CERB for those whose SIN has expired.
  3. Ensure that Seasonal TFWP and SAWP workers have access to income supports for delays in contracts, both inside and outside the country.
  4. Ensure that migrant workers who are forced to leave jobs or those that aren’t starting contracts right now are not deemed to have “quit voluntarily” and receive income supports.
  5. Extend income supports to migrant and undocumented residents who did not earn at least $5,000 in the previous 12 months.
  6. MRN is also calling for healthcare, worker protections, permanent resident status and community support for all: www.MigrantRights.ca/COVID19.

In an unprecedented non-partisan effort, 30 MPPs, MLAs and MNAs and 20 Councilors and Mayors are joining together to call for “emergency income supports as well as all other social programs and rights” for all essential workers regardless of immigration status. Media release here.

Signatories include: (Elected representatives wishing to sign on, please email info@migrantrights.ca)

  1. Adrien Sala, MLA Manitoba St. James, MB
  2. Amanda Lathlin, MLA Manitoba The Pas-Kameesak, MB
  3. Amy Lubik, Port Moody City Councillor, BC
  4. Andrew Stevens, Regina City Councillor, SK
  5. Bhutila Karpoche, MPP Parkdale HighPark, ON
  6. Catherine Mckenney, Ottawa City Councillor, ON
  7. Christina Gray, MLA Edmonton Millwoods, AB
  8. Christine Boyle, Vancouver City Councillor, BC
  9. Claudia Chender, MLA Dartmouth South, NS
  10. Danielle Adams, MLA Manitoba Thompson, MB
  11. Diljeet Brar, MLA Manitoba Burrows, MB
  12. Doly Begum, MPP, Scarborough Southwest, ON
  13. Faisal Hassan, MPP York South Weston, ON
  14. Gary Burrill, MLA Halifax Chebucto, NS
  15. Giuliana Fumagalli, Mayor, Villeray-Parc-Extension-St-Michel, QC
  16. Greg Miller, St. Catharines City Councillor, ON
  17. Hope Jamieson, St. John’s City Councillor, NFLD
  18. Ian Arthur, MPP Kingston and the Islands, ON
  19. Janis Irwin, MLA Edmonton Highlands Norwood, AB
  20. Jasvir Deol, MLA Edmonton Meadows, AB
  21. Jean Swanson, Vancouver City Councillor, BC
  22. Jeremy Loveday, City Councillor, Victoria, BC
  23. Jessica Bell, MPP University—Rosedale, Ontario, ON
  24. Jill Andrews , MPP Toronto -St Pauls, ON
  25. Joel Harden, MPP Ottawa Centre, ON
  26. Karla Bernard, MLA, Charlottetown-Victoria Park, PEI
  27. Karrie Porter, St. Catharines City Councillor, ON
  28. Kevin Arseneau, MLA Kent-Nord, NB
  29. Keenan Aylwin, Barrie Ward 2 Councillor, ON
  30. Kristyn Wong-Tam, Toronto City Councillor Toronto Centre, ON
  31. Laura Mae Lindo, MPP Kitchener Centre, ON
  32. Leah Main, RDCK Director and Silverton Councillor, BC
  33. Lisa Naylor, MLA Manitoba Wolseley, MB
  34. Lisa Roberts, MLA Halifax Needham , NS
  35. Malaya Marcelino, MLA Manitoba Notre Dame, MB
  36. Maggie Burton, City Councillor, St. John’s, NFLD
  37. Marit Stiles, MPP Davenport, ON
  38. Megan Mitton, MLA Memramcook-Tantramar, NB
  39. Mintu Sandhu, MLA Manitoba The Maples, MB
  40. Nadine Nakagawa, City Councillor, New Westminister, BC
  41. Paula Fletcher, City Councillor, Toronto Danforth, ON
  42. Percy Hatfield, MPP Windsor Tecumseh, ON
  43. Pete Fry, Vancouver City Councillor, BC
  44. Peter Bevan-Baker, MLA, Leader of Official Opposition, PEI
  45. Peter Tabuns, MPP Toronto Danforth, ON
  46. Rima Berns-McGown, MPP Beaches Centre, ON
  47. Rod Loyola, MLA Edmonton Ellerslie, AB
  48. Ruba Ghazal, MNA, Mercier, Montreal, representing the Quebec Solidaire parliamentary caucus, QC
  49. Sarah Fowler , Tahsis Village Council, BC
  50. Sarah Potts , City Councillor, Victoria, BC
  51. Sharmarke Dubow, Victoria City Councillor, BC
  52. Shawn Menard, Ottawa City Councillor, ON
  53. Trish Altass, MLA for Tyne Valley-Sherbrooke, PEI, PEI
  54. Uzoma Asagwara, MLA Union Station, MB
  55. Warren McCall, Regina Elphinstone Centre MLA, SK
  56. Zac de Vries, City Councillor, Saanich District, BC

Add your voice to this call, sign our petition!

 

56 élu.e.s s’adressent au gouvernement fédéral pour les travailleur.e.s migrant.e.s et sans papiers

Ajoutez votre voix à cet appel, signez notre pétition!

 

Appel collectif : «Nous demandons au Gouvernement fédéral du Canada de veiller immédiatement à ce que le soutien au revenu soit accessible aux travailleur.euse.s migrant.e.s et sans papiers ne disposant pas d’un numéro d’assurance sociale valide. Les travailleur.euse.s migrant.e.s et sans papiers sont des travailleur.euse.s essentiel.le.s qui prennent soin des communautés — ils et elles méritent un revenu d’urgence de base, l’accès à tous les autres programmes sociaux de même que le droit de prendre soin d’eux-mêmes et de leurs familles durant cette crise. »

 

50 élu.e.s provinciaux et municipaux de toutes les provinces du Canada publient aujourd’hui une déclaration demandant au gouvernement fédéral d’étendre le soutien au revenu à l’ensemble des travailleur.euse.s migrant.e.s et sans-papiers, y compris celles et ceux à l’extérieur du pays, en appui à une proposition du Réseau des Droits de Migrants :

  1. Veiller à ce que les résident.e.s sans numéro d’assurance sociale aient accès à la Prestation canadienne d’urgence en fournissant des numéros fiscaux individuels accessibles lorsque l’information n’est pas partagée avec les autorités de l’immigration.
  2. Étendre l’accès au PCU à celles et ceux dont le NAS est expiré.
  3. Veiller à ce que les travailleur.euse.s saisonnier.ère.s du Programme des travailleurs étrangers temporaires (PTET) et du Programme des travailleurs agricoles saisonniers (PTAS) aient accès au soutien au revenu en cas de retard dans les contrats, à l’intérieur et à l’extérieur du pays.
  4. Veiller à ce que les travailleur.euse.s migrant.e.s qui sont contraint.e.s de quitter leur emploi ou celles et ceux qui ne commencent pas de contrat en ce moment ne soient pas considéré.e.s comme ayant «quitté volontairement» et à ce qu’ils et elles bénéficiant d’un soutien au revenu.
  5. Étendre le soutien au revenu aux résident.e.s migrant.e.s et sans-papiers qui ont pas gagné moins de 5 000 $ au cours des 12 mois dernier mois.
  6. Le MRN demande également des soins de santé, la protection des travailleur.euse.s, le statut de résidence permanente et un soutien communautaire pour tous et toutes : www.MigrantRights.ca/COVID19-fr.

Dans un effort non partisan sans précédent, 30 député.e.s provinciaux et 20 conseiller.ère.s et maires se regroupent pour appeler à un accès au «soutien au revenu d’urgence ainsi qu’à tous les autres droits et programmes sociaux» pour l’ensemble des travailleur.euse.s essentiel.le.s, quel que soit leur statut d’immigration.

Pour les élu.e.s qui souhaitent ajouter leur signature, veuillez envoyer un courriel à info@migrantrights.ca.

Income support for migrants in Canada

Posted on April 6, 2020

english español francais


HAVE YOU LOST WORK OR INCOME BECAUSE OF COVID-19? YOU CAN GET INCOME SUPPORT!

All non-permanent residents with a valid Social Insurance Number can get money through the Federal government’s emergency fund (CERB). You do not need to have filed taxes in previous years and you will not be asked to submit any documents at this time. This is a taxable benefit which the government expects you to declare on your tax return in 2021.

This information is accurate as of April 23. Things are changing constantly. Check back here regularly for updates. 

How to apply:

ONLINE 

(if you already have “MyAccount” or “MyServiceCanada”)

  1. Go to: www.canada.ca/en/revenue-agency/services/benefits/apply-for-cerb-with-cra.html
  2. You will be asked if you were self-employed or an employee. If you click “employee” then you will be asked if you were full time or part time. These questions will not disqualify you, they simply direct you to either the EI or CRA pathway for applying. You will then be asked to sign into your MyAccount / MyService Canada.
  3. Once you have signed in, you will see the list of requirements to qualify. Click “I confirm that I meet the requirements set out above…”. You will not need to provide any documents at this time. The minimum $5000 income in the past 12 months or in 2019 can be from within or outside Canada.
  4. If you were an employee, you will then be asked questions about your past employment, but you will not be asked for any documents at this time.

BY PHONE 

If you have filed taxes in the past:

  1. Call 1-800-959-2019
  2. You will be asked for your SIN, Temporary Tax Number or Individual Tax Number.

If you have never filed taxes:

  1. Call 1-800-959-8281
  2. You will be asked for your SIN, Temporary Tax Number or Individual Tax Number.

Whether you apply online or by phone, you will not need to submit documents to prove you meet the requirements. The minimum $5000 income in the past 12 months or in 2019 can be from within or outside Canada

Are you having problems applying? We can help. Fill out the form below to tell us what happened and we will contact you soon. All information is confidential. 

All of us deserve support during this time of crisis, regardless of immigration status. We are fighting to ensure no one gets left behind! Join us: http://migrantrights.ca/covid19/


This form is created by Migrant Workers Alliance for Change to connect with migrants (non-permanent residents) in Canada, or who are stuck abroad, and who are facing loss of income during COVID-19. We want to know what your experience was applying for income support. Fill out this form if you believe you are not eligible, have been excluded, or if you are having problems and we will get in touch with you! All information is confidential. We are a migrant rights organization and will not share information with government or employers!

___________________________________________________________________________________


Apoyo económico para migrantes en Canadá

¿PERDISTE TU TRABAJO O TUS INGRESOS POR COVID 19? ¡PUEDES OBTENER AYUDA ECONÓMICA!

Todos los residentes no permanentes con un Número de Seguro Social (Social Insurance Number, o SIN) válido pueden obtener dinero a través del fondo de emergencia del gobierno federal (CERB). No es necesario que hayas presentado impuestos en años anteriores y no tendrás que presentar ningún documento en este momento. Este es un beneficio sobre el cual se debe pagar impuestos cuando haces tus taxes en 2021.

Esta información corresponde a lo mencionado el 23 de abril. Las cosas cambian constantemente. Revisa este sitio web regularmente para tener información actualizada.

Como Aplicar:

EN LINEA

(Si ya tienes un “MyAccount” o “MyServiceCanada”) 

  1. Visite: www.canada.ca/en/revenue-agency/services/benefits/apply-for-cerb-with-cra.html 
  1. Te preguntarán si eres empleado o si trabajas por cuenta propia. Si seleccionas “empleado” te preguntarán si era trabajo a tiempo parcial o tiempo completo. Estas preguntas no te descalificaran, simplemente te dirigen a la vía de EI o CRA para presentar la solicitud. Luego te pedirán que ingreses en tu cuenta MyAccount / MyServiceCanada.
  2. Una vez que hayas iniciado la sesión, verás la lista de requisitos para calificar. Haz clic en “Confirmo que cumplo con los requisitos establecidos anteriormente…”. No tendrás que entregar ningún documento en este momento. El ingreso mínimo de $5000 puede ser desde dentro o fuera del país.
  1. Si fuiste empleado, te harán varias preguntas sobre tu empleo anterior, pero no te pedirán ningún documento en este momento. 

POR TELÉFONO

Si has presentado impuestos en el pasado: 

  1. Llama 1-800-959-2019
  2. Te pedirán tu SIN, número de impuesto temporal o número de impuesto individual (ITN). 

Si nunca has presentado impuestos:

  1. Llama al 1-800-959-8281
  2. Te pedirán tu SIN, número de impuesto temporal o número de impuesto individual (ITN).

No tendrás que entregar documentos en este momento para probar que reúnes los requisitos para recibir ayuda económica. El ingreso mínimo de $5000 puede ser desde dentro o fuera del país.

¿Tienes problemas para aplicar?  Podemos ayudarte. Completa este formulario para contarnos qué sucedió y nos comunicaremos contigo en la brevedad posible. Toda la información es confidencial.

Todos merecemos apoyo durante este tiempo de crisis, no importa nuestra estatus migratorio. ¡Estamos luchando para asegurar que nadie se quede atrás! Únete a nosotros: http://migrantrights.ca/covid19/


 

Soutien financier aux migrants au Canada 

Vous avez perdu votre travail ou source de revenus à cause du COVID-19? Vous pouvez bénéficier d’un soutien financier! 

Tous les résidents non-permanents avec un Numéro d’Assurance Sociale valide peuvent obtenir de l’argent grâce à la Prestation Canadienne d’Urgence. Vous n’avez pas besoin d’avoir remis vos déclaration de revenus des années précédentes et on ne vous demandera pas de fournir de documents en ce moment. Cette prestation est un revenu imposable que le gouvernement espère que vous déclarez en 2021.

Cette information est à jour le 23 avril. Les changements sont constants. Vérifier cette page régulièrement pour voir les mises à jour.

Comment obtenir le soutien financier :

EN LIGNE

(Si vous avez déjà “Mon dossier” ou “Mon dossier Service Canada”)

1. Aller sur : https://www.canada.ca/fr/services/prestations/ae/pcusc-application.html
2. Il vous sera demandé si vous êtes travailleur autonome ou salarié. Si vous cliquez “salarié”, alors il vous sera demandé si vous étiez à temps plein ou à temps partiel. Ces questions ne vous disqualifient pas, elles ne font que vous diriger vers la demande d’assurance-emploi ou vers l’Agence de revenu du Canada.
3. Une fois que vous vous êtes identifié, la liste des exigences pour recevoir l’aide s’affichera. Cliquez sur “Je confirme que je remplis les exigences citées ci-dessus…”. Vous n’aurez pas besoin de fournir de documents en ce moment. Le revenu minimal de 5000$ peut venir de l’intérieur ou de l’extérieur du Canada.
4. Si vous étiez un salarié, des questions vous seront posées sur votre ancien emploi, mais on ne vous demandera pas de documents en ce moment.

AU TÉLÉPHONE

Si vous avez déjà fait vos déclaration de revenu :

1. Appelez le 1-800-959-2019
2. On vous demandera votre NAS, Numéro D’Impôt Provisoire ou Numéro d’identification-impôt (NII).

Si vous n’avez jamais fait de déclaration de revenus:

1. Appelez le 1-800-959-8281
2. On vous demandera votre NAS, Numéro d’Impôt Provisoire ou Numéro d’identification-impôt (NII).

Que vous fassiez la demande de soutien financier par téléphone ou en ligne, on ne vous demandera pas de documents en ce moment pour prouver que vous remplissez les exigences pour obtenir l’argent. Le minimum de 5000$ peut provenir de l’intérieur ou de l’extérieur du Canada.

Vous avez des problèmes pour faire votre demande? Nous pouvons vous aider. Remplissez le formulaire ci-dessous et dites-nous ce qu’il s’est passé et nous vous contacterons sous peu. Toute information reste confidentielle.

Nous méritons tous du soutien durant cette période de crise, peu importe notre statut d’immigration. Nous luttons pour que personne ne soit laissé de côté! Rejoignez-nous: http://migrantrights.ca/covid19/

Migrants & Covid19 Response

Posted on March 16, 2020

Crises do not affect us all equally – migrant, poor, and racialized communities will be the first excluded from response measures and the worst affected by the economic downturn. Unless we act!

Winning the fight for racial and migrant justice!

Posted on December 30, 2019

We are in the fight for our lives. Polarization is increasing across the country. Austerity drive governments are in power in many provinces and are slashing public services. The climate crisis is escalating. The worst impacts of these will be on migrants, even as anti-immigrant sentiment increases.

This is a fight we must win. It’s a fight we can win – together. We know we can, because we have accomplished so much, with so little already! 

In 2019, you joined thousands of people in 20+ cities from coast to coast to coast in one of four days of action. Together, we gave a clear warning to politicians that we would not allow racism as a divisive strategy. At these actions, we spoke out against discrimination and global displacement and put forward our platform for justice.

The Migrant Rights Network trained 400 facilitators just between April to September. These facilitators in turn had thousands of one-on-one conversations with people in their lives; busting myths that fuel xenophobia, challenging divisiveness and calling for decent work, universal services, and permanent status for everyone.

While we organized to change minds and the media narrative, we also WON better laws. Care workers facing deportation won a new program for themselves. Immigration detainees won at the Supreme Court of Canada. Farm workers won a commitment to a partial permanent residency program. Migrants pushed for an open work permit for vulnerable workers. International students increased their organizing!

In the days before the election, we issued 10 Election Reality Checks emails full of facts and infographics. You were part of hundreds of thousands of people who read these updates, shared them on social media and used them to talk to your neighbours, friends and family members.

As we approach the end of this incredible year, we know there is hard work ahead of us. Right now, grassroots migrant groups from British Columbia to PEI are holding local meetings to assess  our work to date, and plan for 2020. Just $2 per month would go a long way in ensuring we can continue our work. Give now: www.migrantrights.ca/Donate

If you are part of a self-organized group of racialized people and migrants, get in touch at info@migrantrights.ca. If you want to stay connected, and aren’t part of an organization, sign up!

With your support, in 2020 we will:

  • Bring together grassroots migrant justice organizations from across the country to share strategies and resources, to increase collaboration, and bring migrant leadership to the front!
  • Work closely with climate, labour, feminist and other social movements here and around the world to build a common future where we all thrive!
  • Win better laws and policies for migrants and support campaigns for justice!
  • Create and disseminate popular education materials to build our capacity to fight racism and win!

Together, we will win. Onwards to 2020!

Election Reality Checks

Posted on September 25, 2019

This election, we are publishing regular updates with speaking points and facts to help you talk to your friends, family members and co-workers about racism and immigration.

Often it’s hard to have these difficult conversations, so we prepared a step by step guide to anti-racist conversations to help you.

  • Election Reality Check 1: Let’s Get Louder – For the next 40 days, we will be hearing more lies, half-truths and empty promises from politicians. This is why for the next 40 days, we will be sending you regular Election Reality Checks to help you cut through the noise. These Reality Checks will be full of facts and talking points you can use to respond to politicians who will try to make us blame migrants for low wages, inadequate services and the high cost of living.
  • Election Reality Check 2: Refugees Explained – 9 key facts about refugees that you need to know.
  • Election Reality Check 3: Talking About Blackface – Racialized people, particularly children, are hurt when they see the Prime Minister in Blackface. These images are reminders of all the ways in which they are seen as inferior, been excluded, or tormented. But this is about a lot more than feelings of hurt, this is about systematic laws, policies and culture that underwrite Canada, and how they must change.
  • Election Reality Check 4: Climate Crisis, Racism and Migration – It is no coincidence that the politicians refusing to act on climate change are the same ones drumming up hatred against migrants. Those who have brought us to the brink of climate catastrophe want to evade their responsibility by selling us ineffective individualistic solutions and put the blame elsewhere. To win action on climate, we must reject the politics of division and racism.
  • Election Reality Check 5: Immigration Detention – While migrants are framed as criminals by politicians and the media, the truth is many migrants live in daily fear of being imprisoned without charges or trial, often indefinitely. The threat of detention and deportation keeps migrants from asserting basic rights. Canada’s immigration detention system is unjust, deadly and growing.
  • Election Reality Check 6: What they say vs What they mean on Immigration Policy – During this election you’ll hear many statements and promises about immigration. Some will be explicitly racist, most will be based on half-truths, and all will fall short of what we really need. Here are some common refrains you will hear, and some points you can use to understand and challenge them.
  • Election Reality Check 7: Quebec’s Law 21 Explained – Under the guise of secularism, Quebec’s Law 21 is whipping up anti-immigrant sentiment and Islamophobia. This strategy is not unique to Quebec; it is part of a broader attack on migrants through provincial and federal laws across the country. There is widespread resistance to Law 21 in Quebec. We must amplify that resistance and reject all forms of racism that serve to distract and divide us.
  • Election Reality Check 8: Thank a Migrant Farmworker: We must build communities that prioritize the needs and humanity of migrant farm workers as centrally as our communities rely on their labour. From clean drinking water to safe housing, accessible public transportation, healthcare, full and equal labour and immigration rights, we must build communities in which migrant farm workers and their families can thrive.
  • Election Reality Check 9: Affordability, Work and Wealth: During this election campaign, almost every party has expressed concern for people “struggling to make ends meet” or pledged to make life “more affordable”. Most of the ‘solutions’ on offer, like tax cuts and credits, fail to redistribute wealth and make the economy work for the majority of us. Here are some points you can use to challenge your friends and family members to demand better.
  • Final Reality Check: After the Election: While it may seem difficult to impact what happens inside parliament, we have and we must continue to build our power outside it. Let us coordinate in our workplaces and our communities by talking to people, and winning them over to a shared vision of justice for all, one person at a time, one meeting at a time. And as we come together around issues that matter to each of us the most, we must connect and build links with others here and around the world, towards a common platform of decent work, universal services, permanent status, climate justice, and an end to displacement and discrimination.

4 step guide to talking about racism this election

Posted on August 30, 2019

A recent poll showed that 63% of residents believe that Canada should limit immigration, even though the majority of migrants are coming on temporary permits with few rights. 

Many of our neighbours, colleagues and family members are being convinced by anti-immigrant ideas. It is crucial that they hear from people they know and trust that these anti-immigrant messages are not a solution to our problems but a strategy to distract and divide us. It is crucial that they hear from you.

We are creating tools and tips to help you have these conversations with people in your life. Here are regular bulletins with talking points you can use to respond to the latest anti-immigrant messages your friends and families that we created during the federal election. 

Download a poster version of these 4 steps here. 

We know this is not an easy ask. So, here’s a step-by-step guide:

(1) Listen: Start by listening, and asking questions to identify what feelings are underlying their beliefs. While the specific points may vary, most racist anti-immigrant ideas at their root are motivated by scarcity (there isn’t enough for everyone), law and order (I follow the rules but others do not), or fear (someone is out to get me and my family). Identify the motivating feeling so that you can engage with it. 

(2) Acknowledge: Most of us feel anxious about our future and our children’s future. Acknowledge that and highlight how most of us share this anxiety. Then point out how the people responsible for our low wages, high cost of living, and climate change are the rich and corporations, not migrants.

(3) New facts: Changing people’s minds is largely about values and feelings. But facts are useful too. Share facts about the realities of immigration or the economy, while also talking about why these are not the facts we usually hear and whose interests are served by that. We have lots of resources on our website, and we will be sending you useful facts regularly between now and the election once you sign the pledge at www.migrantrights.ca. 

(4) Solidarity: It’s important to paint a vision of collective struggle that includes all of us as workers, irrespective of immigration status. Talk about how we can all have decent work, universal services, permanent status and fully rights, and a world free of discrimination and displacement if we work together, and the rich pay their fair share. 

The only way to do this is to try. So call up that friend, family member, or co-worker who is falling prey to racist and anti-immigrant ideas and have a conversation. Test out these steps and let us know what worked – email info@migrantrights.ca. Remember: it will take more than one conversation. But we can stop the rise of xenophobia, one conversation at a time. 

Together we can win:

      • DECENT WORK: $15 minimum wage, full labour rights for all, and no employer specific or time limited work permits.
      • UNIVERSAL SERVICES: Quality public services including healthcare, education, income security, childcare, settlement services, pensions, and pharmacare for all.
      • STATUS FOR ALL, STATUS NOW: Permanent resident status for all migrants and refugees here, and landed status on arrival for those who come in the future. No detentions, no deportations!
      • JUSTICE FOR ALL: Indigenous self-determination, gender justice, and an end to racism, particularly anti-Black racism and Islamophobia.
      • NO DISPLACEMENT: An end to practices that force people to migrate including climate change, wars, corporate impunity, and economic exploitation.

 

Immigration Truth & Lies

Posted on August 30, 2019

Learn how to challenge myths about immigration. Let’s unite in our demands for a fair and just society for everyone.

Unite Against Racism Film

Posted on August 30, 2019

This video is a tool to help communities educate themselves about immigration, racism, and the importance of uniting to fight the rise of the right. It comes with discussion guide that will assist you in screening.

Migrant Care Workers Claim Partial Victory, Continue to Demand Landed Status On Arrival

Posted on June 15, 2019

For media contacts, please email info@migrantworkersalliance.org

Toronto, June 15, 2019 — Migrant Care Worker groups from Alberta, British Columbia, Ontario and Quebec welcome changes announced today that finally allow care workers to bring their families and work without work permits tied to employers. These changes respond, in part, to what care workers have been demanding for years. But this victory falls short of the permanent resident status on arrival that is necessary for migrant care workers to be treated the same as others through our immigration system. Many questions and concerns remain about the implementation of the changes announced today, particularly for migrant care workers already in Canada who will continue to be left out. Migrant workers across Canada are taking action on June 16, 2019 for International Domestic Workers Day, see list of events
here.

“Today’s announcement is a result of care workers fighting for our rights for decades, it’s a tremendous victory and testament to our organizing and it’s not enough. Migrant care workers take care of families, and have been for centuries, this is a permanent program with a permanent solution and that means permanent resident status upon arrival for future workers, and full immigration status for all migrant workers already in the country, particularly those who have become undocmented. We particularly need changes for workers already in the country, which means removing arbitrary and unnecessary language and educational requirements, and granting open work permits to all.”
– Kara Manso, Landed Status Now Campaign, Former Care Worker, Coordinator – Caregivers Action Centre

New Home Child Care Provider and Home Support Worker Pilot Program & Changes Needed

The new pilot program will come into force on June 18th, 2019. Care Workers will have to demonstrate 1 year of post-secondary education, CLB level 5, and a job offer in Canada to apply. They along with their spouses and children will be vetted in advance of arrival to Canada. Upon arrival, the Care Worker will receive an occupation specific work permit, spouses will receive an open work permit, and children will receive study permits. Only after completion of 24 months of service, will care workers and their families be able to apply for permanent resident status.

Care Workers have long demanded the creation of non-LMIA specific work permits, and the ability for families to accompany workers – the addition of these in today’s announcement is a victory.

Care workers demand:

    • English language requirements should be kept at CLB Level 3, and educational requirements should be kept at high school. The Interim Program (see below) was created because CLB Level 5 and post-secondary educational requirements were impossible for most care workers, and unnecessary to work or live or succeed in Canada. They should not be re-introduced. These increased requirements will shut out skilled care workers who do not have the money to pay for the education and English language training.
    • Care workers already in Canada should be granted occupational specific work permits immediately. The government has now clearly recognized that employer specific work permits creates conditions of abuse, there is no reason for them to be continued for workers already here.
    • Migrant care workers must be able to come to Canada with permanent resident status on arrival and with their families. Migrant care work is permanent work, and requires a permanent solution, not another pilot program. Requiring 24 months of service before granting permanent resident status gives enormous power to employers which opens up the possibility of exploitation and abuse.
    • The definition of the family unit must be inclusive, and children must be able to get work permits and pay domestic tuition fees. Care Worker families include grandparents, siblings and other relatives who are sometimes primary carers in the family instead of or in addition to spouses – families should be expanded from just spouse and children. Dependent children are of varying ages and there should be no age limit. Accompanying children must be allowed work permits (not just study permits) and be allowed to pay domestic tuition fees. Care workers must have the ability to choose when their families join them.
    • There should be no second medical examination
    • Care Workers in Quebec continue to be left in limbo. Coordinate with Quebec-based Care Worker groups and the Government of Quebec to ensure this program is extended and includes workers based there.

Interim Pathway & Changes Needed

The Interim Pathway created on March 4th and which expired on June 4th is now being extended from July 8th to October 8th. This Interim Pathway was created in response to the arbitrary, unfair and unnecessary requirements that were created in November 2014, which left tens of thousands of racialized workers without a path to permanent residency, needing to choose between deportation and becoming undocumented.

  • The Interim Pathway lowered service requirement from 24 months to 12 months
  • The Interim Pathway lowered educational requirements from 1 year post-secondary education to high school education.
  • The Interim Pathway kept the arbitrary CLB Level 5 requirement, even though only CLB Level 3 is required or necessary to work in Canada.

While the extension of the program is a Care Worker demand, and opens up the opportunity for some workers to apply, Care Workers continue to demand:

  • Expand the Interim Pathway to all workers including undocumented workers who came to Canada under the 2014 Pilot Caregiver program (i.e., grandfather all current caregivers in the program under the Interim Pathway). For those without enough service accumulated, ensure workers can be grandfathered into the new 2019 Caregiver Pilot Program;
  • Allow Care Workers to apply if they have worked in Canada for 12 months, even if the work was done without a work permit; Care Workers should not have to bear the costs of the unworkable LMIA permits
  • Reduce the required language level to CLB Level 3. Without this change thousands of workers face becoming undocumented;
  • Remove requirement for second medical examination as was previously the law; and,
  • An Interim Pathway for Quebec be created in coordination with Quebec-based Care Worker groups and the Government of Quebec. Since the creation of the Interim Pathway many Quebec based workers have been forced to move out of the province to apply for this program creating mass displacement.

Federal Workers Program

Landed Status Now demands the creation of a Federal Care Worker Program 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 worker employees. This would take away the need for third-party recruiters / job agencies and the thousands of dollars they charge care workers to get a job.

Landed Status Now: Care Workers Organize (www.LandedStatusNow.ca) is a national coalition including Caregivers Action Centre (Toronto); Caregivers Connection (Toronto); Alberta Careworkers Association (Edmonton); Migrante Alberta; Migrante BC, Migrante Canada; Migrante Ottawa; PINAY Quebec; Immigrant Workers Centre (Montreal); Association for the Rights of Household Workers (Montreal), Vancouver Committee for Domestic Workers and Caregiver Rights (Vancouver), and Migrant Workers Alliance for Change (Canada).

Open Letter: Labour Council Presidents Across Canada #UniteAgainstRacism

Posted on May 21, 2019

To sign, please fill out the form on this page. To download a PDF, click here. To access a template resolution for your local or Council, click here. 

Brothers, Sisters and Comrades,

An insurgent right wing is seizing political power at the provincial level across Canada. Their victories have ushered in austerity, cuts, and attacks on workers and communities.

We are at a critical political moment. We are calling on Labour Councils and the Labour movement across Canada to #UniteAgainstRacism.

While workers are united in the desire for decent work and strong social programs for all residents, politicians are using anti-immigrant and racist ideas to pit workers against each other. We saw this in the federal by-election in February, when Maxime Bernier’s anti-immigrant party garnered 11% of the vote in Burnaby South. In Alberta many United Conservative Party candidates were found to have close ties to white supremacists. And in Quebec, the Coalition Avenir Quebec campaigned for a 20% reduction in immigration and won a majority. This is Trump’s strategy, and the strategy of many other right wing parties globally.

The mainstreaming of racist ideologies has resulted in grave violence. We were horrified at the mass murder of Muslims in Christchurch at a New Zealand mosque. In Canada, since the deadly Quebec City Mosque shooting in 2017, hate crimes have increased 47% and there are now 300 active white supremacist organizations operating in this country — a 200% increase.

Labour has the opportunity to show leadership and stand strong against racism and xenophobia. We must ensure union members are not divided by racism and lured into voting for a right wing government that will hurt all of us. We must stand united as workers – an injury to one is an injury to all. Our members must see us showing as clearly as possible that we will not be divided.

This year, let’s hold high the banner of #UniteAgainstRacism. Through our visual materials, our media statements, and speeches and in member-to-member education from now on and especially on Labour Day, let us insist that:

  • All workers are suffering, and feel precarious. But we feel strong when we stand together for decent work; for quality public services; permanent immigration status for all; and for gender, racial, climate and Indigenous justice. Let’s build a vision of global solidarity that inspires workers to fight together, not fight each other for scraps. Let’s not allow any political party to use racism to divide us for votes.
  • Immigrants are not responsible for low wages, or poor services, but rather it’s the bosses and their political representatives who exploit us all;
  • Far from benefiting unfairly from their work in Canada, migrant workers and refugees are being exploited in substandard working conditions, because regressive immigration and labour laws restrict their agency and leave them open to abuse;
  • Migrants and refugees aren’t vulnerable, they are organizing and winning rights and justice for all workers;
  • Labour is unified in our call for decent work, universal quality services, and permanent resident status for all workers, including migrants. Now is the time to ensure racial and gender justice including Indigenous self-determination; and an end to practices that force people to migrate including war, corporate impunity and climate change.

As allies of migrant worker groups in the Migrant Rights Network (www.migrantrights.ca), we call on Labour Councils across Canada to make #UniteAgainstRacism a key rallying cry now, and the theme of Labour Day 2019. Join actions in communities taking place on June 16, 2019.

Contact info@migrantrights.ca for #UniteAgainstRacism materials or to arrange a popular education training for your members. You can endorse the letter by filling out the form on this page.

Together, we will win.

Initial Signatories, May 22, 2019

Tiffany Balducci, President
Durham Region Labour Council

Greg Mady, President
Edmonton and District Labour Council

Kevin Smallwood, President
Fredericton and District Labour Council

Janice Folk-Dawson, President
Guelph and District Labour Council

Anthony Marco, President
Hamilton District Labour Council

Suzanne MacNeil, President
Halifax-Dartmouth and District Labour Council

Lesley Jamieson, President
Kingston and District Labour Council

Patti Dalton, President
London and District Labour Council

Henri Giroux, President
North Bay and District Labour Council

Additional signatories

Dan Tobin, President
Northumberland Labour Council

Krysty Thomas, President
Lethbridge and District Labour Council

Kevin Smith, President
Grey Bruce Labour Council

Wayne Kelley, President
Annapolis Valley Labour Council

Michele McCleave-Kennedy, President
Sault Ste Marie District Labour Council

Lou Ann Binning, President
Niagara Regional Labour Council

Shobna Radons, President
Regina & District Labour Council

Deborah Jones, Acting President / 1st Vice President
Winnipeg & District Labour Council

 

March 21: #UniteAgainstRacism | Cross-Canada Day of Action

Posted on April 15, 2019

From March 17-23, over a dozen communities across the country organized rallies, workshops, marches and forum to #UniteAgainstRacism.

Migrant Caregivers WIN MAJOR VICTORY but permanent resident status on arrival for migrant workers still needed

Posted on February 24, 2019

Newly announced pilot Caregiver Program, and Interim Program important steps in the right direction, and a direct response to Caregiver organizing.

CANADA – Migrant Care Worker organizations and allies from across Canada (scroll below for list of organizations) are welcoming the newly announced Caregiver Program which is a direct response to the Landed Status Now (www.LandedStatusNow.ca) campaign and decades of organizing before that, but questions remain on details, and the temporariness of the program continues to allow for migrant Care Worker exploitation. Migrant Care Workers remain united in calling for permanent resident status on arrival for all migrant workers.

Care Worker Wins!

In the new pilot program

  • Sector-specific work permits for Care Workers allowing workers greater ability to leave bad jobs;
  • The ability of migrant Care Workers to bring their spouses and children with them upon arrival;

In the interim program

  • The removal of post-secondary educational requirements;
  • The ability for workers to apply after 12 months of service (instead of 24 months);
  • The ability of workers to count work experience in either of the two streams – Childcare or High Medical Needs; and
  • Expedited processing

Questions remain about recent announcement, including about:

  • Details of the eligibility criteria of the new pilot program;
  • Processing mechanisms of the pilot program particularly with the bulk of processing taking place in sending countries and 5,500 per annum applications cap in place;
  • Interaction between the new sectoral work permits and Labour Market Impact Assessment process which is generally employer specific; and
  • Dates when the new pilot program will go into effect.

Care Worker organizations will be responding to further information as it becomes available.

Temporary program continues to allow for worker exploitation

  • The program announced keeps the temporary nature of the system in place, despite evidence that the lack of permanent resident status is the primary reason for migrant worker exploitation;
  • The changes announced are for a pilot program, restricted to 5 years, and by Ministerial order rather than by changes to law or regulations. This is a temporary change, while Care Work is a permanent need. Care Workers have been coming to Canada for more than 100 years;
  • The announcement excludes workers in Quebec, who remain caught in a web of exploitation;
  • The interim program excludes workers who have become undocumented as a result of exclusionary requirement in the current program, or because they were issued permits for less than 24 months. These workers must be included;
  • The interim program is only open from March 4 to June 4, 2019 – which is not sufficient time for many workers to even hear about the changes. Only 1,955 Care Workers and dependents were granted permanent residency in the first 36 months under the current Caregiver program set to expire in November 2019. This is in stark contrast to the average of 10,740 Care Workers and their dependants who received permanent resident status every year under the previous Live-In Caregiver program;
  • The 5,500 cap on applicants per year is far lower the Care Work in the economy. Concerns remain about assessment in sending countries, and what will happen to Care Workers who apply each year after the 5,500 cap has been reached;
  • It is not clear if the existing criteria of Canadian 1-year post-secondary education equivalent and high levels of English language expertise will be part of the new pilot program. If it is, and assessments are happening in sending countries, this new pilot program will shut out migrants with fewer resources who have historically been able to come to Canada under Caregiver Programs;
  • No resources have been announced for families arriving with Care Workers in the new pilot; or for workers to access the interim program. It is essential that assistance be provided to ensure that family members are able to settle in Canada, including affordable housing, full healthcare and the ability attend schools and post-secondary institutions without paying high international fees;
  • No details on regulating recruiters, licensing employers and holding them jointly financially liable were announced which will be even more essential with processing happening in sending countries;
  • Section 38(1)(c) of the IRPA (“Medical Inadmissibility” rules) has not been repealed which denies PR to an entire family if even one member of the family has a disability. No details have been announced on whether there will be a second medical examination; and
  • Temporary migrant Care Work remains an ad-hoc solution rather than part of a broader Care Strategy in Canada that ensures universal childcare and elder care.

Coalition of Migrant Care Worker groups and allies and Landed Status Now Campaign (in alphabetic order by organization)

For contact numbers of these organizations, please email hussan@migrantworkersalliance.org

  • Association for the Rights of Household Workers
  • Caregivers Action Centre – Toronto
  • Caregiver Connections Education and Support Org – Toronto
  • Vancouver Committee for Domestic Worker and Caregiver Rights
  • Migrant Mothers Project University of Toronto – Toronto
  • Migrant Workers Alliance for Change* – Canada
  • Migrant Workers Centre – Vancouver
  • Migrante Alberta – Edmonton
  • Migrante British Columbia – Vancouver
  • Migrante Canada
  • Migrante Ottawa – Ottawa
  • PINAY Quebec – Montreal

* The Migrant Workers Alliance for Change includes individuals as well as Alliance for South Asian Aids Prevention, Asian Community Aids Services, Butterfly (Asian and Migrant Sex Workers Support), Caregiver Connections Education and Support Organization, Caregivers Action Centre, Durham Region Migrant Solidarity Network, FCJ Refugee House, Fuerza Puwersa, GABRIELA Ontario, IAVGO Community Legal Clinic, Income Security Advocacy Centre, Migrante Ontario, No One Is Illegal – Toronto, Northumberland Community Legal Centre, OCASI – Ontario Council of Agencies Serving Immigrants, OHIP For All, PCLS Community Legal Clinic, SALCO Community Legal Clinic, Students Against Migrant Exploitation, Social Planning Toronto, UFCW, UNIFOR, Workers Action Centre and Workers United.

Landed Status Now

Posted on February 21, 2019

Courageously take action and send an email to the Immigration Minister right now and insist that Care Workers deserve permanent residency status, family unity and full rights. This is about human rights, it’s about Canada keeping its promises, and it’s about ensuring health and care for everyone.

Media Release: Migrant Care Workers Speak Out for Status and Fairness

Posted on November 18, 2018

Download our new report at www.LandedStatusNow.ca

CARE WORKERS WILL BE LAUNCHING A NEW REPORT AND THEIR CAMPAIGN AND SHARING THEIR STORIES IN FIVE CITIES

  • Toronto: Nov 18, 11am, Suite 202, 720 Spadina Avenue, 647-782-6633 (Caregivers Action Centre & Caregiver Connections)
  • Vancouver: Nov 18, 10am, BCGEU, 130-2920 Virtual Way, 604-618-3649 (Vancouver Committee for Domestic Workers and Caregiver Rights)
  • Edmonton: Nov 18, 1pm, CUPE 474 Hall – 10989 124 Street, 780-937-5908 (Alberta Careworkers Association & Migrante Alberta)
  • 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)

CANADA – Today, migrant Care Workers across Canada are raising their voices together to call for permanent resident status on arrival, dignity and fairness for migrant Care Workers by simultaneously launching a report with personal stories from hundreds of Care Workers across Canada. 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 now in limbo.

“Women like us have been coming to Canada for over a century raising children, taking care of the sick and the elderly, being the backbone of the economy, and yet we are treated like we are expendable,” says Kara Manso, coordinator of the Caregivers Action Centre speaking in Toronto. “We need security, and that means landed status on arrival, family unity and justice for workers already here.”

Care Workers are calling on Canada to replace the broken Caregiver Program with a new program that will end precarious status, forced family separation, and exploitative working conditions while improving access to the critical care that Care Workers give to all Canadians. This requires creating a new permanent immigration stream for migrant Care Workers, and in the interim creating open work permits, removing discriminatory language, educational and medical requirements, and granting permanent residency to workers in the country.

The report, “Care Worker Voices for Landed Status and Fairness”, has been produced by Care Workers and their organizations through surveys, focus groups and interviews. It features over a 150 Care Worker stories which demonstrate the painful impacts of family separation, low-wages, precarious status, and unfair laws and policies on racialized women.

An average of 8,000 new Care Worker permits were issued annually in the last five years – all of whom come on employer specific work permits, without their families and with temporary resident status. Over 95% of Care Workers surveyed reported family separation enforced by the Caregiver Program as having the most significant detrimental impact on their lives.

“Care Workers keep coming to Canada with the promise of eventually getting permanent residency and being reunited with their families, but the program excludes so many and is expiring without any details of what will replace it, promises are being broken,” says Julie Diesta of the Vancouver Committee for Domestic Worker and Caregiver Rights. “This isn’t integrity, it is not ethical, Canada must do better.”

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 dependants received permanent resident status every year under the previous Live-In Caregiver program. At least 20,000 Care Workers have applied for permanent residency and are awaiting a decision on their application, others are unable to apply because of new requirements.

“Care Workers do the critical work of raising families, caring for an elderly population and ensuring dignity for those who are sick and disabled, without us the economy doesn’t work, yet we get low wages, long work hours, unsafe housing and constant stress” adds Cynthia Palmaria from Migrante Alberta speaking in Edmonton. “Making these changes won’t just benefit migrants, it will ensure that everyone in Canada is healthy and has a better quality of life.”

“Most people have the ability to change jobs when they have a bad employer, or celebrate their children’s birthday, or sit by their parent’s bedside when they are ill, or be able to take a day off when they are sick, these are basic human rights, and that’s all Care Workers are asking for,” says Evelyn Mondonedo of PINAY Quebec in Montreal. “Care Workers deserve landed status, open work permits, family unity and an end to exclusionary laws.”

The report documents the experiences of workers like Maiko who face unpaid wages. “According to the contract, I work 37.5 hrs per week at $11.40 an hour (back in 2016). But I worked 50 hrs and got no pay for the extra 12.5 hours. I get $1, 275/per month (net).” She worked 12.5 hours per week without pay. That amounts to $815 per month in unpaid wages and overtime premium pay (and $9,781 per year). Our research indicates that most workers are being underpaid at a similar level because of immigration and labour rules.

“Thousands of Care Workers have come to Canada in the last few decades, we have families here, and we vote, all of us are watching closely to see how political parties respond to this looming crisis,” adds Aimee Beboso of Migrante Ottawa. “But more than the political parties, we are hoping for courageous support from everyday people who will join us for justice and fairness for everyone.”

QUOTES FROM THE REPORT

“There are lots of moments of no sleep because we are missing our family; tears because of homesickness. Being separated from your family as a Caregiver adds to the burden that cause depression and guilty feelings of taking care of other people.”

– Martha, Migrant Care Worker

“I’m worried about getting my [permanent residency] application accepted. The government’s caps on new streams makes it harder. And then we have to pass the new language and education tests; I’m worried. I am here since April 2015 and I am still completing my 24 months of work. I have been separated from my family for 10 years already.“

– Maribeth is responsible for 14 family members in the Philippines

“Why do they not give us permanent residency when we come? There is obviously a huge need for workers to care for the elderly. They bring us over to do this important work. But then they delay and delay. By not giving us [permanent residency], they tell employers that we are not worthy. That’s why so many employers do not follow the law and pay us properly.”

– Rosalie, Migrant Care Worker

“It is so hard transferring from one client to another due to the death of my client. I care for people with high medical needs. It is expected that some of them get weaker and die naturally but then I end up being jobless. The immigration department must have some exemption or way of transferring us from one employer to another that doesn’t make us wait for so long and have to start over again and again I am worried that I won’t get my [permanent residency]and my family here.”

– Lisa, a mother of 3 who has been separated from her family for 5 years.

“I work for another family as part-time. They were mostly abusive when it comes to work hours (they made me work more than I am supposed to do). If I’m not done on time because of more work, they added hours but didn’t pay. They will not let me go home. But if I finished work early, they will complain and said I didn’t do my job properly even if I know it’s spotless.”

– Alicia

THE COALITION OF CARE WORKERS ARE DEMANDING:

(1) Federal Care Worker Program

The program is broken and needs fundamental reform. 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 caregivers can use the job bank to find caregiver 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) No one left behind!

Care Workers – like us – who are already in Canada also need fairness, security, and a smooth path to permanent status with our families:

  • 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 be able to renew work permits without Labour Market Impact Assessment: 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 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 PR 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;
  • Clear the permanent residency backlog: 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 – that’s not fair;
  • 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;
  • Section 38(1)(c) of the IRPA (“Medical Inadmissibility” rules) should repealed because it denies PR to an entire family if even one member of the family has a disability.

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