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Canada’s immigration backlog decreases slightly to 2.6 million – Canada Immigration News
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Immigration, Refugees, and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) is reporting a decrease in its August 31 inventory.
A spokesperson from IRCC sent CIC News inventory data suggesting the backlog has been reduced by 95,204 persons in a matter of six weeks.
The inventory across all lines of business has progressed as follows since last July:
- August 31, 2022: 2,583,827 persons
- July 15-17, 2022: 2,679,031 persons
- June 1-6, 2022: 2,387,884 persons
- April 30-May 2, 2022: 2,130,385 persons
- April 11-12, 2022: 2,031,589 persons
- March 15 and 17, 2022: 1,844,424 persons
- February 1, 2022: 1,815,628 persons
- December 15, 2021: 1,813,144 persons
- October 27, 2021: 1,792,404 persons
- July 6, 2021: 1,447,474 persons
IRCC recently came out with a new webpage tracking the inventory. According to that webpage there were 2.4 million in IRCC’s inventory on July 31. Of those, 1.1 million were within service standards and 1.3 million were in the backlog.
CIC News has reached out to IRCC to inquire about the apparent discrepancy in data from the media department compared to data reported on the government website. This article will be updated if an explanation is obtained.
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Immigration category | Persons as of August 31, 2022 |
---|---|
Permanent residence | 513,923 |
Temporary residence | 1,698,284 |
Citizenship | 371,620 |
Grand total | 2,583,827 |
The citizenship inventory stands at 371,620 applicants as of September 1, compared to 444,792 on July 15.
The permanent residence inventory stands at 513,923 people as of August 31, compared to 514,116 as of July 17.
Also on August 31, the temporary residence inventory stood at 1,698,284 people, compared to 1,720,123 persons as of July 17.
Therefore, there have been reductions across all three major groups.
Express Entry and PNP inventories
A total of 40,180 Express Entry applicants are waiting in the queue, a reduction from the previous month when there were 51,616 persons in the inventory.
IRCC has continued to hold rounds of invitations for Express Entry candidates from all programs. Between September 21, 2021 and July 6, 2022, IRCC only invited Provincial Nominee Program (PNP) candidates to apply for immigration. Under the PNP, certain programs (enhanced PNPs) are managed by the Express Entry system, while others (base PNPs) are managed by the provinces’ own systems.
Express Entry-managed PNPs have seen a reduction in inventory, but base PNPs have increased from 35,599 in July to 41,832 in August.
Family class inventory continues upward trend
Inventory for all family class immigration programs are up to 125,746, compared to July when it was 118,251.
The Spouses and Partners program has the second largest inventory compared to all immigration programs at 61,073. Privately sponsored refugees have the largest inventory at 68,123 persons.
The Parents and Grandparents Program (PGP) has 53,029 persons waiting for decisions, up from 47,025 in July.
IRCC efforts to reduce backlog
On August 29, Fraser highlighted how Canada is working to address the backlog and improve the immigration system by hiring up to 1,250 new employees by the end of the fall, modernizing IRCC operations, introducing application status trackers, and publishing monthly data on the IRCC website
Inventory in tables
The following tables show more details of IRCC’s inventory.
Permanent residence inventory
Permanent residency class | Persons as of August 31 |
---|---|
Economic class | 206,688 |
Family class | 125,746 |
Humanitarian and compassionate | 29,224 |
Permit holders class | 16 |
Protected persons class | 152,249 |
Total | 513,923 |
Economic class inventory
Immigration category | Persons as of August 31 |
---|---|
Agri-Food Pilot Program | 866 |
Atlantic Immigration Pilot Programs | 1,528 |
Atlantic Immigration Program | 210 |
Canadian Experience Class (EE) | 5,214 |
Canadian Experience Class (No EE) | 118 |
Caring For Children Program | 29,179 |
Federal Investor | 4 |
Federal Self Employed | 4,022 |
Federal Skilled Workers (C-50) | 120 |
Federal Skilled Workers (EE) | 11,669 |
Federal Skilled Workers (Pre C-50) | 23 |
High Medical Needs Program | 4 |
Live-in Caregiver Program | 832 |
Provincial/Territorial Nominees (EE) | 22,998 |
Provincial/Territorial Nominees (No EE) | 41,832 |
Quebec Entrepreneur | 259 |
Quebec Investor | 10,727 |
Quebec Self Employed | 82 |
Quebec Skilled Workers | 23,559 |
Rural and Northern Immigration Pilot | 1,103 |
Skilled Trades (EE) | 299 |
Skilled Trades (No EE) | 5 |
Start-up Business | 1,314 |
TR to PR | 50,721 |
Total | 206,688 |
Express Entry inventory
Immigration program | Persons as of August 31 |
---|---|
Federal Skilled Workers (EE) | 11,669 |
Canadian Experience Class (EE) | 5,214 |
Skilled Trades (EE) | 299 |
Provincial/Territorial Nominees (EE) | 22,998 |
Total | 40,180 |
Family class inventory
Immigration program | Persons as of August 31 |
---|---|
Children & Other Family Class | 8,880 |
FCH-Family relations – H&C | 2,764 |
Parents and Grandparents | 53,029 |
Spouses & Partners | 61,073 |
Total | 125,746 |
Humanitarian and compassionate class inventory
Immigration program | Persons as of August 31 |
---|---|
HC & PH class-ADM Dependant Person Overseas | 8,880 |
Humanitarian & Compassionate Straight | 2,764 |
Humanitarian & Compassionate with Risk or Discrimination | 53,029 |
Public Policy With RAP | 61,073 |
Public Policy Without RAP | 4,385 |
Total | 29,224 |
Permit holders class inventory
Immigration program | Persons as of August 31 |
---|---|
Permit holders class | 16 |
Total | 16 |
Protected persons inventory
Immigration program | Persons as of August 31 |
---|---|
Blended Visa Office-Referred | 148 |
Dependants Abroad of Protected Persons | 26,919 |
Federal Government-assisted Refugees | 32,365 |
Privately Sponsored Refugees | 68,128 |
Protected Persons Landed In Canada | 23,572 |
Quebec Government-assisted Refugees | 1,117 |
Total | 152,249 |
Temporary residence inventory
Application type | Persons as of August 31 |
---|---|
Study Permits | 152,147 |
Study Permits Extensions | 23,896 |
Temporary Resident Visas | 896,772 |
Visitor Record | 96,598 |
Work Permits | 359,247 |
Work Permits Extensions | 169,624 |
Total | 1,698,284 |
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News
Child care in Canada: Trudeau unveils new help for providers – CTV News
The federal government is launching a new loan program to help child-care providers in Canada expand their spaces, and will be extending further student loan forgiveness and training options for early childhood educators, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced Thursday.
The prime minister unveiled a trio of child-care-centric commitments that will be included in the upcoming federal budget, with the aim of opening up more $10-a-day child-care spaces across the country, as the Liberals continue to work towards creating 250,000 new spaces by March 2026.
Specifically, the Liberals are vowing to offer $1 billion in low-cost loans and $60 million in non-repayable grants to public and not-for-profit child-care providers, so they can build or renovate their care centres.
This funding will be administered through the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. (CMCH), which Trudeau called “a common sense approach that will help child care be developed alongside housing.”
An additional $48 million is being earmarked for the next four years to extend student loan forgiveness — similar to the program offered to rural doctors and nurses — to early childhood educators, in an effort to incentivize more teachers to work in smaller communities.
The federal government is also promising $10 million over the next two years to train more early childhood educators.
The prime minister, speaking in Surrey, B.C., alongside the minister currently leading the file, Jenna Sudds, touted the bilateral child-care agreements in effect across the country for seeing thousands of children placed in affordable spaces.
However, in recent months Canadian parents and care providers have sounded alarms about increasingly long daycare waitlists. And, operators in some provinces have threatened to withdraw from the lower-cost program because they’re struggling to make ends meet.
Trudeau said while the government has funded 100,000 spaces so far and is aware of the challenges in rolling out this new national program, not enough families have access and not all provinces are moving as fast as they should.
“I want to take a moment to talk to young moms, many of you millennials. You’ve grown up with so many pressures in this economy, the 2008 recession, COVID, climate change … and we want to make sure that everyone — especially moms raising kids — has the best chance to succeed and thrive,” Trudeau said.
“As Canada grows, as families grow, we want to make sure more kids can access high-quality child care… That’s what fairness for every generation is all about.”
The prime minister also got political, accusing Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre of opposing the program, despite the Official Opposition voting in support of a recently passed Liberal piece of legislation meant to enshrine in law a commitment to the Canada-wide early learning and child-care system, and the long-term funding needed to maintain it.
Reacting to the news, NDP MP and critic for children, families, and social development Leah Gazan said the announcement was a “direct result of advocacy” by her party, care workers, unions, and women’s organizations.
She also pointed the finger at the Conservatives, accusing them of trying to stall the program and push for a “for-profit private system that parents can’t afford.”
Liberal pre-budget strategy
Similar to how Wednesday’s rollout of renter-fairness-focused pre-budget news went, cabinet ministers are making echo announcements of the new child-care affordability measures across the country Thursday afternoon.
This is all part of a new communications strategy the Liberals are employing in the lead up to the release of the April 16 federal budget.
Practically every day between now and when Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland releases the massive economic document, the Liberals are expected to tease out bits and pieces of the budget.
In an effort to stretch out their ability to market the measures within it, Trudeau as well as members of his cabinet will unveil new initiatives over the next two weeks, to the point that the vast majority of the budget will be public prior to budget day.
Traditionally, governments have held budget news — save for some pre-tabling leaks — for the day the document is tabled in the House of Commons post-daylong reporter and stakeholder lockup.
Kicking off this strategy on Wednesday, Trudeau issued a video across social media platforms indicating the overall theme for the 2024 budget will be “generational fairness,” a message meant to speak to millennials and Generation Z.
“When I first decided to run for office, one of my biggest motivations was working to create a Canada that young people saw themselves… As prime minister, I’ve never lost sight of that,” Trudeau said in the clip.
“You as a young Canadian are the heartbeat of our economy. You power our growth and you deserve an economy that gives you a fair shot at success. But, this moment we’re all living in is throwing big challenges your way… So we’re going to roll up our sleeves and work like hell. And we’re going to tell you about what we’re doing to fix it, over the next two weeks.”
While Trudeau’s 2015 election victory was credited in part to a historic surge in young people turning up at the polls, Poilievre has been chipping away at that Liberal voting bloc of those aged 43 and under, seeking to appeal to their current struggles to get ahead with his “powerful paycheques” and housing affordability arguments.
In November 2023, Trudeau tapped Max Valiquette, a marketing guru with self-described expertise in understanding younger generations, as his new executive director of communications.
“We’re witnessing a different communication strategy from the government. They’re implementing something they’ve not tried before. We’re not going to have a budget day on April 16. We’re going to have budget days between now and April 16,” said political commentator Scott Reid in an interview on CTV News Channel.
“Frankly, this government knows that it needs to break through, it knows that it needs to connect with Canadians… Is it going to turn around the polls overnight? No. Might they get a little bit more of a hearing than they otherwise would have been? Probably.”
With files from CTV News’ Vassy Kapelos and Annie Bergeron-Oliver
News
Ontario releases 2023 Sunshine List, top earner made $1.9M – CBC.ca
Five employees at Ontario Power Generation are in the top 10 earners on the province’s so-called sunshine list for 2023, with the province’s highest salary nearing $2 million.
The annual sunshine list documents public sector employees with salaries over $100,000. In this year’s edition, there are 300,570 names, more than 30,000 higher than last year.
Kenneth Hartwick, CEO of the electricity Crown corporation, is in the top spot again with a salary of $1.93 million.
Two other executives at the organization — chief strategy officer Dominique Miniere and chief projects officer Michael Martelli — made nearly $1.2 million and nearly $1 million, respectively.
You can find a list of the top 100 earners below.
The presidents and CEOs of the Hospital for Sick Children and the University Health Network are also in the top 10, earning around $850,000 each. So is Phil Verster, who is president and CEO of the provincial transit agency, Metrolinx, with a $838,097 salary.
Caroline Mulroney, president of the Treasury Board, highlighted other high growth areas in a release.
“The largest year-over-year increases were in the hospitals, municipalities and services, and post-secondary sectors, which together represented approximately 80 per cent of the growth of the list,” she said.
The list shows 17 professors or associate professors at the University of Toronto had earnings of $500,000 or more.
A statement from a University of Toronto spokesperson said the school competes with top universities and private-sector employers around the world for faculty members.
“This occasionally results in salaries above the usual range for a small number of faculty members.”
Premier Doug Ford earned $208,974 last year. His chief of staff, Patrick Sackville, earned $324,675.
Matthew Anderson, CEO of Ontario Health, a provincial agency the Ford government created in 2019, earned $821,000. Meanwhile the public servant leading the Ministry of Health, deputy minister Catherine Zahn, earned $477,360, and Health Minister Sylvia Jones, $165,851.
There are more than 25,000 registered nurses on the list, including seven who earned more than $300,000 last year.
Chief Justice Sharon Nicklas, who was appointed to the top post in the province’s judiciary last May, earned $388,960.
The police chiefs of Thunder Bay, Daniel Taddeo, ($376,428) and Hamilton, Francis Bergen, ($374,492) were paid more last year than OPP Commissioner Thomas Carrique ($373,472). Taddeo retired in April 2023.
Toronto police Chief Myron Demkiw, who took over the post in late 2022, earned $353,411.
Organizations that receive provincial government funding are also required to disclose salaries for the sunshine list, so it includes top earners at some registered charities.
The chief executive of the True Patriot Love Foundation, Nicholas Booth, earned $421,149. The foundation funds support programs for veterans and military families.
The president and CEO of the Canadian Red Cross Society, Conrad Sauve, earned $412,970, while the YMCA of Greater Toronto’s chief executive, Medhat Mahdy, earned $394,057.
Salaries of other key Ontario public figures include:
- $826,539 for Ontario Pension Board CEO Mark Fuller.
- $709,581 for Ontario Lottery and Gaming Association president & CEO Alfred Hannay.
- $601,376 for Registered Nurses Association of Ontario CEO Doris Grinspun.
- $596,392 for Dean of Ivey Business School, Western University, Sharon Hodgson.
- $563,291 for LCBO president & CEO George Soleas.
- $546,053 for Dean of the Faculty of Health Science, Queen’s University, Jane Philpott.
- $533,112 for Royal Ontario Museum president & CEO Joshua Basseches.
- $486,192 for University of Toronto president Meric Gertler.
- $464,148 for Chief Medical Officer of Health Dr. Kieran Moore.
- $455,091 for Chief Coroner Dr. Dirk Huyer.
- $404,003 Art Gallery of Ontario director and CEO Stephan Jost.
- $395,974 for former auditor general Bonnie Lysyk.
Adjusting sunshine list threshold
The sunshine list has been around for almost 30 years, always set at six figures and up.
At Queen’s Park on Thursday, some members of provincial Parliament faced questions on whether the $100,000 starting point should be adjusted.
Green Party of Ontario Leader Mike Schreiner said it should be pegged to the rate of inflation, but others disagreed.
“I think that people think that $100,000 is still a lot of money, especially in an affordability crisis,” said NDP MPP Catherine Fife, who’s also the finance critic.
Government House Leader Paul Calandra said the government has no plans at this time to change the threshold on the sunshine list.
“I think it’s an important document that serves the people well in highlighting the salaries of our public employees.”
The Public Sector Salary Disclosure Act, enacted by former Progressive Conservative premier Mike Harris in 1996, compels organizations that receive public funding from the province to report the names, positions and pay of people who make more than $100,000.
The interactive chart below shows the top 100 earners on the list, based on both salary and benefits.
Search the complete Sunshine List for yourself here.
News
1 dead, 2 critically injured after car crash in Montreal
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Three people are in hospital with critical injuries after their vehicle crashed into a tree. Police believe they might be connected to two drive-by shootings that took place early Thursday morning.
2 drive-by shootings also took place overnight
Urgences-santé say one person died and two others were critically injured after their vehicle hit a tree in the Rosemont neighbourhood.
Montreal police believe the crash may be linked to two drive-by shootings early Thursday morning.
The first happened around 5 a.m. on Pie-IX Boulevard. Police say a car was shot at repeatedly and the driver, a 41-year-old man, was injured in the upper body. He was transported to hospital, but his life is not in danger, say police.
Shortly afterward, shots were reported in the Plateau Mont-Royal borough, near the intersection of Saint-Joseph Boulevard and Henri-Julien Avenue. No one was injured.
Police say they are investigating to determine if there is a connection between the collision and the shootings. Montreal police spokesperson Jean-Pierre Brabant says it’s possible those in the vehicle were involved in the shootings.
The province’s independent police watchdog is now involved.
with files from Chloë Ranaldi
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