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Immigration Corner | Agri-Food Foreign Workers Pathway To Canadian Citizenship


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Dear Miss Powell,
My husband has been going back and forth to Canada on a work permit and would like to become a citizen and bring me and my son up to live there with him. He said his employer at the farm told him about a new agricultural programme that could help us, and we would like to know more about it.
NE
Dear NE,
You did not indicate your husband’s occupation or the type of work permit that he has. The good thing is that he appears to have the support of a caring employer. To determine his eligibility, I would need to know more, but I will highlight the key information under the programme to help you to start a conversation with an immigration lawyer to assess your family’s eligibility under this or other immigration programmes in Canada and to guide you in the steps to becoming a citizen.
Most workers who work on a farm are usually hired under the Temporary Foreign Worker Programme or the Temporary foreign workers programme (TFWP) or the Seasonal Agricultural Workers Program (SAWP). The rules for each are different for each programme. It is therefore important to know the type of work permit and the category under which your husband work experience falls, to determine if he would qualify to get permanent residence under this pilot programme and later apply for to be come citizenship of Canada.
Under the existing TFWP, foreign workers are usually granted a work permit for up to 24 months. The standard practice under this programme is that employers can offer work for a maximum of 24 months, and then the worker is required to return home when the work permit expires.The employer can then rehire the worker, after they have been outside of Canada for four years.
The SAWP is a popular programme for workers from countries like Jamaica, Trinidad & Tobago, Barbados Mexico and other OAS countries. Under the SAWP, workers are usually granted a restrictive work permit for a maximum of eight months, to deal with seasonal jobs such as apple-picking.
This rotating system of employment has proven to be very unstable to both the foreign worker and the employers.
Agri-Food Immigration Pilot
Recently, the Department of Immigration, Refugee and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) announced that it will be implementing a new three-year pilot programme to create a pathway for permanent residency.
The agri-food immigration pilot is designed specifically to assist foreign workers in the agri-food industry to get permanent resident status. After living and working in Canada for a few years, the applicant and family could be eligible to apply for Canadian Citizenship.
The pilot is expected to bolster the economy of rural areas in various provinces where local economies are struggling due to aging population and the shortage of workers in the agricultural and food processing industry in Canada. Therefore, farmers and meat producers are hoping that this new pilot programme will provide them with permanent workers and prevent the common attrition rate in their industry.
This programme is also, expected to create a sense of security and belonging, since workerswill be granted permanent residence status. The workers and the employers will also benefit from having a more stable work environment. Some benefits for the workers under this pilot would be access to social services and the ability to benefit from employment insurance and the Canadian Pension Plan scheme.

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Who will qualify?
The persons who would qualify for this programme are non-seasonal workers in the agri-food sectors, who have a job offer. This would include labourers such as butchers, mushroom farm workers and other workers who have been granted work permits for two to three years.
The eligible occupation and industries include meat processing, butchers, food processing labourer, livestock raising, farm supervisors, harvesting labourers for mushroom production and greenhouse crop production.
Applicants are expected to be able to show that they have a minimum of 12 months of full-time, non-seasonal Canadian work experience. This experience must be under the TRWP, with a valid work permit. Futhermore, the work experience in Canada, must fall under one of the occupations mentioned above.
Like most other programmes, there is a minimum educational and language requirement. The applicants must show that they have at least the equivalent of a Canadian high school level education. To prove this, most international workers are required to get an educational credential assessment report form one of the authorized organizations to certify international education.
The applicants will also be required prove language competency. Applicants will need to sit the The International English Language Testing System general training, The Canadian English Language Proficiency Index Program - General English exams, or the TEF examinations to demonstrate a Canadian Language Benchmark Level 4 in English or French.
Exclusions
Workers who fall under the category of low skilled farm workers who come to Canada on an employer-specific work permit and who fall under the SAWP, would not qualify under this pilot programme. It will not cover farm workers who only come to Canada during the harvest season for a period of eight months.
Although the government has not announced a start date, it is expected that it will be in effect by 2020.
The above information is just to provide you with basic information to help you to start a conversation with an authorised Canadian lawyer, to assist you with the assessment of your family’s eligibility under this new pilot or other immigration programmes and advise you about the next step for application for citizenship after you have been granted permanent residence status.

Quick facts from IRCC

  • Employers in the agri-food sector who intend to be part of the pilot will be eligible for a 2-year Labour Market Impact Assessment.
  • Temporary foreign workers will be able to apply under this pilot in early 2020.
  • A maximum of 2,750 principal applicants, plus family members, will be accepted for processing in any given year. This represents a total of approximately 16,500 possible new permanent residents over the 3-year duration of the pilot.
Deidre S. Powell is an immigration lawyer, mediator and notary public. Submit your questions and comments to info@deidrepowell.com or call 613.695.8777/ 876.922.4092. You can also find her on facebook.com/jamaicanlawyer.


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