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https://nationalpost.com/news/politics/canada-pausing-intake-of-highly-skilled-immigrant-workers-amid-heavy-backlog
Canada pausing intake of highly skilled immigrant workers amid heavy backlog
Despite a labour shortage in parts of the country, the federal government is pausing new invitations because it doesn’t have the ability to process them
Canada’s immigration system for high-skilled workers is severely backlogged and even amidst a labour shortage in some parts of the country, the government is pausing new invitations because it doesn’t have the ability to process them.
In a memo obtained by the National Post, immigration officials outline that “an estimated 76,000” are in the inventory for federal high skilled worker applications, which is more than what the government needs to meet targets all the way out to 2023.
The same memo says the express entry pool, which includes skilled workers, skilled trades and people with experience living in Canada, has more than 207,000 people in the pool. Canada’s immigration plan has a variety of different classes including skilled workers, provincial nominees, family reunification and refugees.
With travel bans in place, high-skilled worker applications from overseas have been on pause since September 2021. Last year, the government still managed to hits its record-high immigration targets, but did so mostly by inviting people already in Canada on temporary permits or as students to become permanent residents through a new temporary resident to permanent resident program (TR2PR).
The government’s current immigration plan forecasts bringing in 110,500 skilled workers next year, but the department says in a memo that could have to be cut by as much as half, because the department has so much other work.
“These reductions are due to admissions space required to accommodate the TR2PR stream and the resettlement of Afghan nationals to Canada,” reads the memo.
The Liberals initially pledged to bring 20,000 Afghans to Canada, but during the fall campaign doubled the pledge to 40,000; now 7,000 of them have arrived in Canada.
The department aims for a six-month processing time for federal skilled workers (FSW), but in the memo they warned that could rise dramatically.
“Processing times are currently at 20.4 months (over three times higher than the service standard) and is expected to continue to grow as older inventory is processed. The FSW processing time is expected to rise to 36 months throughout 2022.”
Immigration Minister Sean Fraser was not available for an interview, but Rémi Larivière, a spokeswoman for the department, said the government will still bring in highly skilled workers, because so many are already in the queue.
“The already existing robust inventory of skilled candidates to process means that there won’t be a reduction in 2022 of the number of new skilled permanent residents arriving in Canada to work and settle,” she said in an email. “This pause is temporary; invitations to apply under the FHS streams will resume once the processing inventory is reduced enough to create space for new intake.”
Larivière said the fall fiscal update included measures to help reduce the backlog.
“The Government of Canada has proposed to provide $85 million in 2022-23 so it can process more permanent and temporary resident applications and reduce processing times in key areas affected by the pandemic.”