Mudanças na Imigração
Calma pessoal não é me relação à imigracão de skilled-workes, pelo menos não agora, mas sim em relação a sponsorship, ou seja, quando você quer trazer algum parente para morar com você. Mas seria isso um presságio par mudanças também nos processos de imigrações?
Veja a reportagem abaixo (desculpe em inglês):
Veja a reportagem abaixo (desculpe em inglês):
Canada: A nice place to visit but you can’t apply to live here
Nicholas KeungImmigration Reporter
Immigration Minister Jason Kenney
Starting today, Ottawa will
stop accepting applications for immigration sponsorships of parents and
grandparents until 2014 in hopes of reducing a growing backlog.
In launching the first phase
of an action plan to expedite family reunification Friday, Immigration Minister
Jason Kenney said the federal government will take in 25,000 parents and
grandparents in 2012, 43 per cent above its 2011 level. Meanwhile, fewer refugees,
nannies and people applying to stay on humanitarian grounds will be admitted.
By cutting new applications
and increasing intake, Kenney said he hopes to reduce the current backlog of
165,000 parents and grandparents by half in two years.
To relieve the pain of
immigrants separated from their older relatives, Citizenship and Immigration
Canada will start issuing the new Parent and Grandparent Super Visa on Dec. 1,
which will allow members of that group to visit their families in Canada on a
temporary basis for up to two years.
The visa — which Kenney said
will take only eight weeks to process — will allow holders to make multiple
entries over a span of 10 years. But there is a catch: Elderly visitors must
obtain private Canadian health-care insurance during their stay here. And
applicants must still meet the minimum income requirement to apply.
“So many families say to me
they don’t necessarily want moms and dads or grandparents to immigrate
permanently to Canada,” Kenney told a news conference in Mississauga.
“They just want them to be
able to come and stay for an extended period, to help care for their kids when
they are young and also be able to go back home, where they are well settled
with other families and friends.”
Kenney said he is confident Canadian
visa posts have the resources to handle the anticipated influx of applications
for the super visas and the enhanced targets for sponsorships.
While the super visas are
welcomed, critics say the mandatory medical insurance will create an instant
barrier for many families, favouring those who are well-off.
“This requirement will create
a two-tier access to our immigration system. We have argued that there’s no
research or experimental evidence that parents and grandparents of new
Canadians are an undue burden on our social and medical systems,” said Debbie
Douglas, of the Ontario Council of Agencies Serving Immigrants.
The government plans to hold
consultations next year on how to redesign the parents and grandparents program
to avoid future large backlogs when it takes in new applications in 2014.
On Friday, the immigration
department also belatedly released the breakdown of the number of immigrants it
plans to accept in various immigration streams. In its annual report tabled
Tuesday, Ottawa had only said categorically that it would maintain the same
immigration level.
In 2012, the government plans
to take in 157,000 economic migrants, down 3 per cent from this year, with the
quota allotted for live-in caregivers-turned-permanent residents slashed by almost
half to 9,000.
Canada will also take in 10
per cent fewer refugees — from 29,000 in 2011 to 26,000 in 2012. Spots assigned
to people allowed to stay in Canada on humanitarian grounds will be down by 14
per cent to 7,900.
The only category that will see
an increase in 2012 is family reunifications, up from 65,500 to 69,000, though
the quota for spouses and children will be reduced from 48,000 to 44,000.
abraço
Mas, quando vier o Consolador, que eu da parte do Pai
vos hei de enviar, aquele Espírito de verdade, que procede do Pai, ele
testificará de mim. João
15:26
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