Ottawa is preparing to crack down on employment-insurance recipients who are not seeking work in areas where employers are forced to bring in foreign workers to fill jobs.
Immigration Minister Jason Kenney said Wednesday the government wants to reduce disincentives to work by creating a "greater connection" between the EI program and the temporary foreign worker program, which is under Mr. Kenney's purview.
"What we will be doing is making people aware there's hiring going on and reminding them that they have an obligation to apply for available work and to take it if they're going to qualify for EI," Mr. Kenney told the National Post editorial board on Wednesday. He was touting immigration reforms that will try to streamline the entry of immigrants and foreign workers, favouring entrepreneurs, innovators and those with high quality professional credentials.
The reforms would require unemployed Canadians to accept local jobs that are currently being filled by temporary foreign workers.
"Nova Scotia province-wide has 10% unemployment, but the only way Christmas tree operators can function in the Annapolis Valley is to bring in Mexicans through this agricultural worker program," he said, also pointing to the increased number of Russians working in Prince Edward Island fish processing plants and Romanians working at the Ganong chocolate factory in New Brunswick.
"Even on the north shore of New Brunswick, which has the highest unemployment in the province, the MPs keep telling me the employers definitely need more temporary workers. What's going on here?"
Minister of Human Resources Diane Finley will soon address the issue in further detail, Mr. Kenney said. The coming changes were first revealed in last month's federal budget, which proposed spending $387million over two years to align EI benefit amounts with local labour market conditions.
The government will consider more measures to ensure the Temporary Foreign Worker Program will continue to meet those labour needs by "better aligning" the program with labour demands, according to budget documents. At the same time, businesses will have to have made "all reasonable efforts" to recruit from the domestic labour force before they seek workers from abroad.
When an employer looks to the government for a labour market opinion, which is one step in getting approval to hire foreign temporary workers, Mr. Kenney said the government will soon point out the number of people on EI in that employer's region and ensure the people collecting EI are aware of that job opportunity.
"If you don't take available work, you don't get EI," he said. "That's always been a legal principle of that program."
Original Article
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Author: Sarah Boesveld
Immigration Minister Jason Kenney said Wednesday the government wants to reduce disincentives to work by creating a "greater connection" between the EI program and the temporary foreign worker program, which is under Mr. Kenney's purview.
"What we will be doing is making people aware there's hiring going on and reminding them that they have an obligation to apply for available work and to take it if they're going to qualify for EI," Mr. Kenney told the National Post editorial board on Wednesday. He was touting immigration reforms that will try to streamline the entry of immigrants and foreign workers, favouring entrepreneurs, innovators and those with high quality professional credentials.
The reforms would require unemployed Canadians to accept local jobs that are currently being filled by temporary foreign workers.
"Nova Scotia province-wide has 10% unemployment, but the only way Christmas tree operators can function in the Annapolis Valley is to bring in Mexicans through this agricultural worker program," he said, also pointing to the increased number of Russians working in Prince Edward Island fish processing plants and Romanians working at the Ganong chocolate factory in New Brunswick.
"Even on the north shore of New Brunswick, which has the highest unemployment in the province, the MPs keep telling me the employers definitely need more temporary workers. What's going on here?"
Minister of Human Resources Diane Finley will soon address the issue in further detail, Mr. Kenney said. The coming changes were first revealed in last month's federal budget, which proposed spending $387million over two years to align EI benefit amounts with local labour market conditions.
The government will consider more measures to ensure the Temporary Foreign Worker Program will continue to meet those labour needs by "better aligning" the program with labour demands, according to budget documents. At the same time, businesses will have to have made "all reasonable efforts" to recruit from the domestic labour force before they seek workers from abroad.
When an employer looks to the government for a labour market opinion, which is one step in getting approval to hire foreign temporary workers, Mr. Kenney said the government will soon point out the number of people on EI in that employer's region and ensure the people collecting EI are aware of that job opportunity.
"If you don't take available work, you don't get EI," he said. "That's always been a legal principle of that program."
Original Article
Source:
Author: Sarah Boesveld
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