February 1, 2017 issue

Immigration

Canada’s express entry program: two years in review
Catherine Sas
By Catherine Sas (Asian Pacific Post)
When Canada's new immigration program, Express Entry, was introduced on January 1, 2015, it completely transformed Canada's economic immigration stream.
Gone were the days where an applicant controlled their own destiny. Now prospective immigrants need to register a profile on the Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) portal, and wait for an Invitation to Apply (ITA).
Draws from the pool of registrants are generally made twice a month and are based upon an applicant's Comprehensive Ranking Score (CRS). IRCC promised that processing times for applicants who received ITAs would be sped up and processed in six months or less. Let's take a look at how Express Entry has fared for the past two years and what may be in store for 2017.
The ITA draws are announced by way of Ministerial Instructions each month.
The CRS points scores that attracted ITAs are set out below:
The start of 2015 saw ITA draws issued to registrants with very high CRS scores but over the course of the year, the CRS scores fell significantly from a high of 886 in January to a low of 450 in Fall of 2015. 2015 saw a total of 23 draws with five draws at over 700 CRS points and the majority between 450-489 CRS points.
The scores for 2016 overall were consistently lower than 2015. 2016 had a total of 27 ITA draws with only one at over 700 CRS points, 2 over 500, and the majority between 453 and 497.
However, no CRS score lower than 450 has received an ITA as of yet.
Up until November 19, 2016 applicants were able to obtain 600 CRS points if they had a Labour Market Impact Assessment (LMIA) based work permit.
These 600 CRS points were in addition to the points that an applicant would earn for their education, language proficiency and foreign and Canadian work experience which could lead to scores of over 1000 CRS points which virtually guaranteed an ITA to an applicant with an LMIA.
However, in November, Canada's then Immigration Minister, John McCallum reduced the CRS points for an LMIA based work permit from 600 to 50. He also changed the definition of an offer of employment to include people in Canada on certain kinds of work permits such as for Intra-Company Transferees or persons on work permits pursuant to a bilateral trade agreement such as NAFTA.
This levelled the playing field for persons already working in Canada and further strengthened the significance of Canadian work experience within Canada's economic immigration program.
Unfortunately, the Minister's November announcements did not provide significant points increases for Post Graduate Work permit holders.
Minister McCallum has been on record as saying that international students are the most desirable of prospective immigrants but so far Express Entry has not been tweaked to bring an ITA to most international students.
Given the changes made for additional CRS points and the drastic reduction of points issued to LMIA work permit holders, ITAs are likely to be issued in the coming months below the 450-point threshold. 2017 may be the Express Entry Year of the International student!
(Catherine Sas, Q.C. has over 25 years of legal experience. She provides a full range of immigration services and is a leading immigration practitioner (Lexpert, Who’s Who Legal, Best Lawyers in Canada). Go to www.canadian-visa-lawyer.com or email casas@shaw.ca.)
 
Newcomers take first citizenship oath of 2017 in Supreme Court
Recreating the first ever citizenship ceremony that took place 70 years ago, the first new Canadians of 2017 numbering 26 from all over the world, took their oath at the Supreme Court on January 3, 2017. On January 3, 1947, the very first Canadian citizenship ceremony took place with then Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King taking the first oath. Prior to 1947, Canadians were considered British subjects with no separate Canadian citizenship.
On hand to help swear in the 26 new citizens this year was Citizenship minister John McCallum who noted that “citizenship ceremonies are always special, but this one in particular because here we are in the Supreme Court and 70 years ago today Mackenzie King was citizen number one.”
McCallum told the new Canadians that it didn’t matter how long they have been Canadians they become full citizens with the same rights as everyone else the moment they take their oath. He said the anti-immigrant rhetoric that has become prominent in the United States and other western democracies would not be welcomed in Canada.

 

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