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Trudeau says he could have acted faster on immigration changes, blames ‘bad actors

armoured

VIP Member
Feb 1, 2015
17,240
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Who are the bad actors?
There's a whole industry of shady consultants and marketers pushing some of these things, including fake documents.

That doesn't excuse the federal government - they should've expected this.

I blame others like some of the provinces (who used international fees to avoid funding universities and colleges). And some of the colleges went WAY overboard expanding for international students and offering them fairly useless degrees (without building housing, too); some students bought into it because of the implicit promise of getting permanent residency status.

But again: the feds should have expected (they know from experience!) that fraud in the immigration system happens. They put the priority on more numbers and not checks and balances.

Plenty of blame to go around.
 

canuck78

VIP Member
Jun 18, 2017
55,571
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Would add corrupt businesses who charge for closed work permit holders or for LMIA job offers. Provinces didn’t do anything about the degree mills and allowed private colleges to offer public degrees. Municipalities ignored illegal and unsafe rental housing knowing many were exploiting a vulnerable population and that many were not declaring the income.
 

armoured

VIP Member
Feb 1, 2015
17,240
8,861
Provinces didn’t do anything about the degree mills and allowed private colleges to offer public degrees.
I'd add there was some serious influence lobbying/donations to politicians from the private colleges and even some public ones/degree mills and related entities. Ontario especially - cut public funding (Ontario higher education spending is lowest of all provinces) which flattered the budget, and opening the international students gate wide - well, all the hogs headed straight for the trough, telling the provinces it was all great and free money from abroad. Colleges especially spent lots of money expanding some of their weakest and least demanding programs (easiest to expand quickly).

Again - still, the feds took too long to introduce measures to stop the outright fraud (fake acceptances/invitations).

But the problems were NOT limited to fake acceptances. A lot of the 'real' acceptances were to dodgy and marginal institutions and programs.
 
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Copingwithlife

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Jul 29, 2018
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Earth
Would add corrupt businesses who charge for closed work permit holders or for LMIA job offers. Provinces didn’t do anything about the degree mills and allowed private colleges to offer public degrees. Municipalities ignored illegal and unsafe rental housing knowing many were exploiting a vulnerable population and that many were not declaring the income.
Can’t forget they were WARNED about letting Mexico just have ETAs . WARNED internally. Tens of thousands of asylum claims costing taxpayers millions to process .

Actually looking forward to when Trump gets in . He’s going to chew up & spit out Trudeau
 

canuck78

VIP Member
Jun 18, 2017
55,571
13,515
Can’t forget they were WARNED about letting Mexico just have ETAs . WARNED internally. Tens of thousands of asylum claims costing taxpayers millions to process .

Actually looking forward to when Trump gets in . He’s going to chew up & spit out Trudeau
As a Canadian last thing you should be happy about is Trump in office no matter who is in power at any level of government.
 

canuck78

VIP Member
Jun 18, 2017
55,571
13,515
I'd add there was some serious influence lobbying/donations to politicians from the private colleges and even some public ones/degree mills and related entities. Ontario especially - cut public funding (Ontario higher education spending is lowest of all provinces) which flattered the budget, and opening the international students gate wide - well, all the hogs headed straight for the trough, telling the provinces it was all great and free money from abroad. Colleges especially spent lots of money expanding some of their weakest and least demanding programs (easiest to expand quickly).

Again - still, the feds took too long to introduce measures to stop the outright fraud (fake acceptances/invitations).

But the problems were NOT limited to fake acceptances. A lot of the 'real' acceptances were to dodgy and marginal institutions and programs.
There is lots of blame to go around and for short term gain of a few we will be paying for years if not decades as a country.