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A
computer modelling specialist from Mumbai working for his masters degree,
Mukesh Thadani had dreams of making it big in Canada. A single phone call
from his lawyer, however, shattered his carefully nurtured ambition: the
introduction of a new point grid system made him ineligible for immigration
to Canada.
It was no different for tools-and-dye maker Suresh Pant in Rai Bareilly,
Uttar Pradesh. Equipped with a trade diploma and seven years of experience,
he waited three long years and spent thousands of dollars confident that
labourers have a great chance in Canada. Now he watches his five-year-old
son Rahul play with a make-believe stethoscope and wonders if he will
ever achieve his dream of making him a "foreign-educated doctor".
When leaders experiment, the likes of Thadani and Pant (names changed)
will take a blow. While Canada's Minister of Citizenship and Immigration
Dennis Coderre declares he wants to increase annual immigration from 250,000
to 300,000, he has altered the immigration laws to hit the chances of
thousands of aspiring immigrants around the globe. The "passing mark"
in the points-based system of assessment has changed: to qualify an immigrant
has to now score 75 points out of 100 as opposed to the earlier 70 out
of 110. Worse, the new law is retroactive. Meaning the applicants will
now be assessed under a set of rules different from those they had initially
applied under.
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PORT OF ENTRY: South Asian immigrants arrive at Montreal
airport
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"I'm lucky I got through the old system. I don't know French."
Prakash Nair, IT professional and fresh immigrant
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For Indians, immigration now means waiting in queue for three years (and
for the Chinese it is an eight-year wait). The processing fee of Rs 15,000
(Cd$500) will not be refunded. Top that with lawyers fees and miscellaneous
payments-the wallet becomes that much lighter. Only the lucky few, who
were not given a preliminary "paper screening" by immigration
officials, are eligible for a refund.
That's not all. The rules can change all over again. Coderre has promised
a "review" if the laws seem too stringent. Immigration lawyers
are indignant, while economists and opposition parties are criticising
the Liberal government for its "incoherence" on the issue of
immigration.
David Rosenblatt, an immigration lawyer who heads the Federation for
Better Immigration Policy, is harsh. "This is a callous attitude,"
he says. "It is an insult to the applicant. First you take the money
and then change the rules."
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Nair on arrival in Toronto
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"The rules do not reflect the reality of the workplace."
Pradeep Puri, hotelier
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The rules are certainly stringent. They will affect more than 200,000
principal applicants and close to 500,000 families worldwide, say lawyers.
Thousands of applicants, who had submitted their files by 31 December
2001 but whose applications are not processed by March 2003, will now
be evaluated under the new point-grid system with just a small discount:
they qualify if they get 70 rather than 75 out of 100.
That will be little help, argues Rosenblatt. "They will be evaluated
according to six factors rather than the 11 factors earlier. And even
though the six appear to have higher points it is an illusion, because
there are fewer factors under these six categories where an applicant
can obtain points to qualify," the lawyer says. Some of the earlier
factors have been clubbed together, thus affecting the distribution of
points. For example, the 10 points under the arranged employment factor,
for which an applicant is required to possess a confirmed Canadian job
offer at the time of the interview, validated by the HRDC (Human Resources
Development of Canada). If he is able to do so, he also scores an additional
five points from the other new adaptability factor taking his tally to
15 points.
Kelli Ralph-Campbell, director at Rosenblatt Associates, feels that this
has tipped the scales against the applicant. "What it means for most
applicants is that the number of points they have to obtain becomes 75
out of the now 85 points (instead of 100) since few applicants (less than
one per cent) have that confirmed job offer in hand. Earlier only eight
points were awarded for confirmed employment."
Among other major changes is the abolition of factors like personal suitability.
It was a subjective assessment made by the immigration officer of the
applicant's adaptability, motivation and resourcefulness and allowed great
flexibility. The new adaptability factor instead prescribes specific things
and awards points accordingly. One gets more points if one has at least
a year's previous work experience or two years post-secondary study in
Canada. Family connections abroad add points as does an educated spouse.
Earlier, the qualification of the spouse didn't matter and the immigration
was based only on the principal applicant's credentials.
Michael Niren, an immigration lawyer counselling several Indian applicants
says that the new law will be particularly harsh on Indians. "Many
single applicants from India with experience in the field of information
technology will lose out now if they do not have a family or experience
or have not studied in Canada."
The Government says the new grid is meant to create a human capital model
of assessing immigrants with the multiple and "flexible skill sets"
that the economy needs. An applicant will now not be given points according
to a profession he/she is in. So out goes the Education and Training Factors
(ETF), along with another link the National Occupations List-a ranking
of occupations according to the level of training required and the demand
for workers in Canada. Earlier, an applicant would receive a certain number
of points if his occupation corresponded to those on this list. The occupation
factor was in-turn tied to this list and an applicant then received a
set number of points corresponding to their occupation's ranking. Both
have been deleted.
Many single, highly-skilled applicants stand to lose out if they do not
know French, for the current rules stress on this language. While a knowledge
of English plus French scores a maximum of 24 points, English alone gives
at the most 16. Most Indian applicants are not fluent in French and, more
frustrating for immigrants, is the fact that other than in Quebec, the
language is not a pre-requisite for doing business in Canada.
Satish Sharma, a truck owner who immigrated from Delhi four years ago,
is surprised at this condition. "This is preposterous. French is
required only in Quebec, which in any case has its own immigration system
with a different selection criteria."
The Government quotes research that indicates that immigrants with transferable
skills, work or study experience in Canada, family connections and firm
job offers are more likely to settle successfully. But opposition MPs
say these new rules eliminate thousands of skilled workers.
In fact, many lawyers have moved the Federal Court in Canada to seek
a "writ of mandamus" instructing the consulates in countries
to finish processing all the cases of applicants by March 2003. But the
new set of rules make it difficult to appeal against a rejection. Earlier,
one could appeal directly to the Federal Court. Now an applicant must
first get a judge's leave to appeal to the Federal Court.
But Coderre still has to thrash out the biggest issue-that of not recognising
degrees from other countries, especially in fields like medicine and engineering.
Highly qualified people are forced to take up menial jobs after immigration.
Says Manoj Khatri, a former bank manager from Mumbai and an IIM and IIT
graduate, who now works at a tele marketing call centres: "There
is a very wide gap between the immigration policy and the labour industry
here. I don't understand what they want especially as they keep talking
of this drastic labour shortage. There is hardly any recognition of talent
and all they talk about here is the Canadian experience."
Hotelier Pradeep Puri, who migrated from Delhi 25 years ago, says, "The
Government has not been able to integrate the immigration policy with
the reality of the workplace and decide what Canadian employers really
want. That is the biggest problem. Toronto has the largest educated taxi
force in the country, thanks to the fact that virtually no foreign degrees
are recognised."
Adds Suchi Sethna, a qualified doctor who had to work as a waitress:
"It is not uncommon to hear of dentists serving coffee and it engineers
driving taxis or even of pilots delivering pizzas. Coderre, like many
of the former immigration ministers, has not been able to resolve this
complex problem."
Coderre, in his defense, stresses that there is a need for both blue
collar as well as skilled workers. More points have now been awarded to
applicants with a trade certificate or a second degree. Bilingual workers
will be encouraged and older skilled workers will be more welcome as workers
between 21 and 49 will score the maximum number of points (10).
But for businessmen, says Niren, it is going to be a tough sell. "Entrepreneur
applicants now require a net worth of at least $300,000 whereas in the
past there was no such requirement. This will cut many successful business
aspirants out."
Luck smiled on Prakash Nair, a computer programmer from Surat recently
arrived in Toronto. "I'm glad I scraped through the old system. Neither
do I speak French nor have I ever set foot in Canada or have any relative
here ... But my friends are not going to be as lucky." Now Nair will
surely ask his friends back home to start taking French tuitions. "Maybe
then they will hit the 75 mark," he remarks. Then adds: "By
the way, computer programming is done in the English language, you know?"
The successful immigrant hails a taxi and disappears into the warm Toronto
summer.
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