The ability for parents to move to Canada permanently is relatively new. For a long time it was understood that immigration meant that you would not be able to bring your parents to Canada and people still immigrated. That often meant that one child remained in their home country with the parents or parents were left on their own. In many countries, especially with access to public healthcare, you can not sponsor your parents and people still immigrate to those countries. There may be some who choose not to immigrate but given that we can’t meet the healthcare demands for people who worked and paid taxes adding more seniors who will likely never work or pay taxes is tough to justify. The argument that is often used is that you pay a large amount of taxes so you cover the cost of your parents care only works if you are paying substantially more taxes than you are paying now. There are some examples where parents and their own dependent children are healthy all their lives and their children are healthy only they are adults and independent and die suddenly at age 90 but that is very rare. Most families will face medical issues over time especially in the last 5 years of life that adds up to substantial healthcare spending. While children are young it is not unusual to visit the doctor or have to go to the ER fairly frequently which adds up and tax dollars don’t only go to healthcare: The ability to visit on a supervisa for long periods of time is a personal choice and comes with both negatives and positives consequence. Many do return to their home country at least annually or visit for shorter periods of time so they can access healthcare in their home country, make sure their home is in good condition, visit friends and family, deal with any administrative issue like pension or banking in general, etc. Dealing with relatively simple medical issues in Canada like a simple infection is not prohibitively expensive. If CRA allowed children to claim medical costs for their visiting dependent parents or grandparents it would reinforce many people’s view that their parents had moved to Canada permanently when they are visitors. You can’t compare Canadian citizens/PRs who are able to claims expenses for their dependent parents who are also Canadian PRs/citizens to Canadian citizens/PRs whose parents are visiting Canada. One set of parents file Canadians taxes and have spent their lifetime or a large percentage of their life working and paying into the Canadian tax base while others have not and are currently not filling taxes. Do agree that the asylum system and other immigration programs need to be reviewed and changed but issues with the asylum system does not mean that parent sponsorship should be made easier or quota should be increased. The amount of seniors claiming asylum is relatively low. The state of the healthcare system, the ability to support existing senior who are already PRs or citizens and our ageing population are things that need to be considered. Anyone working in healthcare will tell you that we can’t absorb more seniors. Immigration is one of the things used to combat our ageing population so allowing unlimited parent and grandparent sponsorship would add to the ageing population. Many tech workers are not going to stay in Canada and I have seen many who sponsor their parents and leave them in Canada while they move to mostly the US so yes Canada will lose some skilled workers because of the inability or difficulty sponsoring parents or grandparents but we would lose many skilled workers for other reasons. It is impossible to guarantee parents sponsorship given the volume of newcomers to Canada and we have limited healthcare resources. Focusing on meeting the needs of the existing populations will be challenging enough. It is very hard to justify how a senior who has never worked or paid taxes in Canada should have access to services while people who have worked and paid taxes all or the majority of their lives (many who immigrated to Canada) are unable to obtain the services or are in the same line waiting for services. For example there are millions in Canada without a GP which will only get worse. If I have been a Canadian taxpayer for the past 40+ years and are trying to secure a GP it would feel extremely unfair that a sponsored parent who has only recently received PR in Canada and will likely never pay taxes may be able to secure a GP before I am able to get one. You can replace GP with any other HC resource. If there was excess capacity in the system that would be different but there is not. Many considering immigration to Canada are also being misled by IRCC and are under the false impression that parent sponsorship is guaranteed and/or will be relatively fast and easy after receiving PR and meeting the 3 years (1 year in Quebec) of an incredibly low LICO. In reality parent sponsorship isn’t guaranteed and in the majority of cases parents will need to way wait much longer than 3 years to get selected plus and additional processing time of up to a few years. The fact that parent sponsorship is not guaranteed and wait times people have actually experienced should be posted. That way people considering immigrating to Canada can make an informed decision. Decisions related to PGP and supervisas and the push to increase quotas and length of visit are often made based on the likelihood of securing the “immigrant vote” which is a very important voting group. PGP is a top 3 voting issue in some ridings. Most parties and politicians are not willing to address the feasibility of PGP or supervisas on the record other than competing to promise higher quotas, the longest lengths of stays, etc. Off the record they will admit that the program isn’t feasible given the volume of newcomers, a HC system in crisis, LICO being way too low, many families who are able to secure PGP or supervisas are also using the foodbank and applying for low income housing (either the whole family or parents applying for low income senior housing), many are falsifying their income when applying for especially PGP, etc. Parent sponsorship and visit with a supervisa is a complex issue but politicians won’t even discuss the issue and whether it is feasible out of fear of the backlash. Meanwhile most Canadians are unaware of the program or because PGP is often described as children being financially responsible for their parents many are under the false impression that children pay out of pocket for their parents healthcare or the parents don’t have access to “free” healthcare, that parents who get PR will get access to all programs that other PRs get access to like tax rebates, often access to both OAS and GIS after 10 years, access to subsidized housing, prescription coverage depending on the province, etc. Other than not being able to apply for welfare for 20 years and 10 years in Quebec you have access to everything if you have received PR through PGP. Canada need immigration for a variety of reasons but there also need to be a rebalancing of how people get PR when meeting the 500k quota. The proportion receiving PR via family sponsorship, asylum or refugee, other H&C reasons versus economic pathways needs to be reassessed. It is much harder to get PR visa economic pathways, which should not be the case, and is leading to people to attempt to secure PR status via things like asylum claims and H&C without grounds for these claims and often with fraudulent documents or exaggerated or incorrect incorrect. Sadly we are going to see an increase of these fraudulent claims because IRCC accepted a very large amount of work/study permits, has increased the amount of people accepted via humanitarian programs which has been abused (for example Turkey earthquake program became a way for anyone from Turkey to secure a WP with and there is as a huge number of applicants in the last 4-6 weeks before programs expired), approved an extremely large amount of study permits, allowed for WP approval for anyone from Canada (IRCC has not done anything about people paying employers and consultant/lawyers for job offers), etc. There is only a limited number of spots available in the yearly PR quota for economic immigrants after processing for family members and PRs due to asylum or other H&C reasons. CRS scores will remain very high if not higher. The are many aspects of the immigration system that needs to be assessed and IRCC needs to address the fraud and abuse of the immigration system.