:
I call this meeting to order.
Welcome to meeting 43 of the House of Commons Standing Committee on Citizenship and Immigration. Today we will continue our study of the conditions faced by asylum seekers.
I confirm that all witnesses have conducted the required technical tests in preparation for the meeting.
For our first panel, I would like to welcome our witnesses today.
We are joined by Frantz André, spokesperson and coordinator for Comité d'action des personnes sans statut.
We are also joined by The Refugee Centre, represented by Abdulla Daoud, executive director, and Pierre-Luc Bouchard, refugee lawyer and head of the legal department.
Our third witness for today is Eva-Gazelle Rududura, vice-president of Unis pour une Intégration Consciente au Canada.
On behalf of all the members, I would like to welcome you all. You will have five minutes for your opening remarks, and then we will to go to our rounds of questioning.
We will start with Mr. André.
You have five minutes for your opening remarks. You can please begin.
[Translation]
It is a privilege to have the opportunity to talk about the crisis situation that migrants in general find themselves in when they arrive in Canada. I am going to take the situation of Haitian migrants, very specifically, as an example, but you should know that there are similarities with what other migrants of various origins experience. Nonetheless, it must be noted that at present, a large majority of the migrants who arrive at the border via Roxham Road are of Haitian origin, as was the case in 2017.
Their arrival via Roxham Road is described as "irregular". What must be described as not only irregular, but also tragic, is the fact that these Haitian migrants have had to transit numerous countries, travelling through forests or areas where they were targeted by robbers, when they were not being attacked by wild animals. Some migrant women in particular have suffered sexual violence along the way.
You will understand that these migratory journeys leave scars and trauma. Of course the migrants pass through the United States before arriving in Canada, but they very often decide not to stay there because of the mistreatment and racism they suffer in that country. We will recall the shocking images that circulated last year in the news showing American border agents on horseback chasing migrants toward a river, lassos in hand, as if it was a slave hunt.
Apart from those images, there are also the shocking facts: the United States has deported more than 28,000 Haitians without giving them an opportunity to have their asylum claim heard. In that situation, Haitian migrants, like migrants of other origins, prefer to come to Canada to claim refugee protection. However, the safe third country agreement requires that their claim be made in the United States. That, in a nutshell, explains why migrants come to enter Canada by irregular means.
Regarding how migrants are received, there is inconsistent processing of cases that is a result of a lack of resources. The other challenges relate to housing for migrants. In some cases, there are still quarantine situations that delay filing documents. In other cases, migrants who were housed in Quebec have been given short notice to find accommodation on their own, or else agree to be moved by bus from where they are being housed in Quebec to a facility in Ontario. I have heard reports that some of them did not understand they were being taken to another province.
With respect to the refugee protection claim document, the "brown paper", that allows the holder to obtain a work permit, it requires other preliminary documents to be completed and submitted electronically in order for the claim to be analyzed. However, since some migrants do not have the technical skills or the ability to write in one of the two official languages, some migrants send the documents in late, so there is a long waiting period before they obtain a work permit. This means that they have no choice but to continue receiving last resort assistance, which is insufficient to meet their basic needs and keeps them in a precarious situation.
Some choose to work under the table and are then at the mercy of employment agencies that do not abide by labour standards or employers who subject them to abusive working conditions. A major challenge relates to the difficulty of finding an immigration lawyer, whether through legal aid or privately. At the same time, the government portal, which should make it possible for people to find information or send documents, is very difficult to use.
There is much more to say, but five minutes is not enough to talk about the distress experienced by asylum claimants who have chosen to come to Canada in the hope that they will be able to work and integrate into a welcoming and safe society under the rule of law.
For some months, Haiti has been in the news because the situation is not secure and because the humanitarian crisis has recently been exacerbated in that country, which is my country of origin. What is not explained in the media is the connection between Canada's foreign policy in Haiti and the flight of Haitian migrants to Canada. Canada has to have a foreign policy that does not contribute to exacerbating conflicts abroad. Most importantly, Canada has a duty to receive migrants with the dignity and respect that they expect.
Once again, thank you for inviting me to speak on this subject.
:
Thank you. I'll be joined by Pierre-Luc Bouchard as well.
Honourable Chair, vice-chairs and members of the committee, thank you for the opportunity to submit a brief and appear on behalf of The Refugee Centre today.
I'm joined by the head of our legal clinic, Maître Pierre-Luc Bouchard, to bring forth an issue that we believe needs to be addressed urgently by this committee and policy-makers at large regarding the asylum-seeking process in Canada.
Typically, as soon as an individual makes an asylum claim in Canada, whether it be an inland claim, a border claim or an irregular crossing claim, they are instantly given the refugee protection claimant document, famously known as the brown paper. As soon as they are granted this document, they are given 45 days to submit their paperwork and initialize their claim. The brown paper affords them certain rights within this country, including the interim federal health plan and the right to apply for a work permit for asylum seekers in Canada.
This committee is already aware that it can take up to two years to get a hearing with the IRB, also known as the Immigration and Refugee Board. The brown paper is the only form of Canadian photo identification given to the claimant, which is vital for their ability to reside in Canada while they wait for their hearing.
In early January 2022, Maître Pierre-Luc Bouchard and I started encountering two additional documents, depending on the point of entry for the refugee claimant, in temporary lieu of the brown paper. These are entitled “acknowledgement of claim” and “entry for further examination”. Both of these documents serve as a bureaucratic tool to delay granting the refugee claimant the brown paper, while stripping them of certain rights that the brown paper affords them.
At first, it provided an appointment dated three to six weeks from the refugee claimant's time of entry for them to acquire their brown paper and become eligible to apply for asylum in Canada. However, as time progressed, appointment times for both of these documents lengthened to 12 to 24 months. Furthermore, these dates seem to be arbitrarily set. In one instance, our legal clinic saw an appointment given 16 months from the time of entry and the appointment was on a Sunday, when the IRCC offices are closed. This practice is seemingly becoming the norm, as well. From our own internal statistics, from September 1 until today, over 90% of the 312 asylum seekers we have worked with have received an acknowledgement of claim with a date in the future for a brown paper.
With the existing delay in hearing times at the IRB, and now the additional delays created by the CBSA and the IRCC, we have witnessed an average time, from entry, that a refugee claimant spends waiting for their turn to prove that they will gain safety in Canada go from two years to four years. Most of these people do not have a Canadian photo ID, nor the ability to work, as work permits are processed separately and take an extra six to eight months to process. This is a recent policy that was passed.
If this practice of additional bureaucratic hurdles continues, we will witness devastatingly severe economic and social outcomes for the refugee claimant population. These delay tactics force refugee claimants to be dependent on social assistance without the ability to work, not only to provide for themselves, but for the Canadian economy as a whole.
Furthermore, without a Canadian photo ID, they are forced into housing with few to no rights, as the only landlords willing to rent out to individuals without an official photo ID depend on cash-only payments in buildings with extremely poor conditions. Access to health care is also severely impacted, as the majority of clinics that accept the IFHP are not aware of this new document, the acknowledgement of claim, and turn away many of our clients.
These unnecessary additional hurdles are forcing our clients into a cycle of systemic poverty.
Despite common beliefs, Canada has the means and the capability to provide for our future citizens with a better and more stable start to life in our country. The commendable Canadian response to previous world crises exemplifies how our nation can provide for vulnerable individuals. We witnessed government documentation being provided for vulnerable individuals and processed swiftly and hastily when it came to the Syrian and Afghan crises, and the Ukraine crisis more recently.
Furthermore, the brown papers were being issued with fewer staff and fewer resources before COVID-19 and prior to our borders reopening. Now we are experiencing a similar or lesser number of claims, with more funding and more staff, making the reasoning for such forms puzzling at best.
Go ahead, Pierre.
:
Good afternoon, parliamentary committee members and guests.
My name is Eva-Gazelle Rududura and I am the vice-president of UNICC, Unis pour une intégration consciente au Canada, a not-for-profit organization whose objective is to promote the harmonious integration of newcomers from the Burundian diaspora into society and the workforce, and enable them to contribute to the social and cultural development of their new country, Canada.
In response to the invitation the organization received to testify regarding the conditions faced by asylum seekers in the Burundian community who arrive via Roxham Road, we did some information-gathering in order to collect their testimony. In addition to the information we regularly receive from the members of the community we meet with and help to integrate, we held individual discussions with more than a dozen people who had come via Roxham Road. When they were assured that their anonymity would be protected, they spoke openly. We are going to provide you with a condensed version of what they said.
Everyone who spoke regarding entry to Canada via Roxham Road talked about the warm, humane and very respectful reception they got from the border services and police officers. In general, the people who spoke said they had received good guidance regarding how the administrative formalities would proceed, as well as help in navigating to obtain the support services they needed.
One woman who had come via Roxham Road when she was pregnant told us that when she arrived she was greeted in French and she felt better, not just because of the language, but also because of the human warmth of the Canadian officers. After helping her complete the administrative process, they showed her a place where she could buy something to eat and guided her to the station where she was able to get the bus to go to the downtown Montreal YMCA, where she spent the night. At the YMCA, she met another woman who directed her to the immigration office so she could report that she preferred to join her uncle who lived in Ottawa. Her case was then transferred to Ottawa, where she is living today with her husband and two sons. That woman is the wife of the current president of UNICC, Corneille Nibaruta, who joined her several years later. Today, they both work for the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.
In the course of our interviews, which were relatively similar in terms of the positive responses, we also heard the experience of a young man who arrived several months ago via Roxham Road, who knew no one in Canada. He told us that all he knew about this country was that he could build a life here that was worth living. Today, he has found a shared apartment and is impatiently awaiting a work permit so he can enter the workforce.
This enthusiasm for work is a hallmark of the Burundian community living in Canada. A majority of that community is composed of people who were first granted protected person status. Today, they have integrated into society and have become permanent residents or Canadian citizens and are contributing to the richness of Canada. They are also proud of this.
The members of the Burundian community in Canada include public servants in the federal and provincial governments, healthcare workers who are saving lives and helping to keep Canadian healthcare systems thriving from coast to coast, successful entrepreneurs who are creating jobs and helping to strengthen the Canadian economy, and experienced engineers like the Burundi-Canadian woman who is working on projects like the Canadarm or bringing the Internet to the North Pole.
Another not insignificant characteristic of the Burundian community is its considerable contribution to Canadian francophonie, as shown by these figures: between 2016 and 2020, five per cent of the francophone immigrant population in Canada outside Quebec originated from Burundi. Between 2006 and 2016, Burundi ranked second, after France, among the countries of origin of francophone newcomers in Ontario.
Last, the refugee claimants of today are also the potential Canadian residents and citizens of tomorrow whom Canada can count on. By giving thousands of refugee claimants a fresh start, Canada in return receives the finest they have to offer, whether that be their knowledge, their skills, their labour, or, in many cases, their youth.
I have attached to my presentation an article that the president of UNICC, Corneille Nibaruta, wrote in celebration of the welcome that people find in Canada. The article was published in Le Droit on June 28, 2019, and is entitled "La reconnaissance d'un citoyen envers le Canada". Today, Mr. Nibaruta is a proud and committed Canadian citizen, whose story resembles that of many others in our community. It is a story that, like so many others, began with entry via Roxham Road and continues today with the gratitude of a proud and committed citizen.
Thank you.
:
Thank you, Madam Chair.
I would first like to thank our guests for being here today and having this discussion about this very important subject.
Mr. André, I want to tell you that we do understand that discrimination is not something that can be quantified in studies. You really have to experience discrimination to understand what it is and what it does to people.
Ms. Rududura, I want to thank you for your excellent testimony. You did a good job of talking about the Canadian Burundian community, of which I am a member myself, and you said a lot about how Burundians are contributing to this country.
Why do you think people in the Burundian community, or any other people, choose to enter via Roxham Road instead of the existing borders? Do you think the danger they face is what causes them to enter via Roxham Road, and thus risk so much to be able to be in Canada?
What do you think about the fact that Roxham Road is a direct link to the United States? Do Burundians think the United States is not a safe country for them? Why do they not stay in the United States?
:
Thank you for your questions, Ms. Kayabaga.
From the discussions we have had with people in the community, I have understood that people who enter via Roxham Road are sometimes afraid they will not be able to be accepted because they have no connection to Canada or immediate family here. At the same time, there is also the need to be in a place that feels a little bit familiar.
In Burundi, most of us are francophones. I know that when I came to Canada, hearing French being spoken made me feel better. It was difficult enough being far from home, so being able to come to a place that felt familiar to me was also important. After that, everyone has a unique story. There are people who are pursuing the dream of coming to Canada.
When you leave home, it is as much to be in a place where you are at last able to rest easy. There is also the feeling that the same welcoming atmosphere will not exist in the United States. As a result, when you see a place not very far away that looks familiar, you go there.
:
Refugee protection claimants are very grateful. At the border, I have not really heard any negative reports, or if so, just a few.
As one of our colleagues suggested here, we could give migrants their "brown paper" or work permit when they cross the border, including a social insurance number. That would be enough to make them feel better about the possibility that they will be able to make their contribution.
They are full citizens as soon as they cross the border and we have to give them the opportunity to work from that moment on. After all, there is a labour shortage in Canada. That would put their minds at ease, rather than reading comments on WhatsApp, the app they use, where people say they have been waiting seven or eight months for their papers and are still receiving social assistance.
:
Thank you for that question.
The United States uses precisely that safe third party agreement to send people to us whom they should be respectfully admitting. It is easier for them to take a very harsh approach, and that results in people not necessarily entering by regular border crossings.
For example, a woman arrived in Canada with her husband and their children last week. Rather than having to wait months for a work permit, they decided to cross through the woods. [Technical difficulties] to get caught by the American authorities.
When I talk about dignity, I am thinking about situations like those. Canada has to show that it acts much more appropriately than that and open its regular borders, by eliminating the safe third country agreement.
:
We haven't recommended that, but we would support that idea with no problem. As Mr. André said, people are afraid of the American authorities.
Personally, I met someone just this morning from the LGBTQ+ community who came from Sierra Leone. As probably a number of migrants do, this person went south to Ecuador, because it was the only place they were able to go, and then came back up to Canada.
When the person arrived in the United States, they were detained for months. In order for them to be released, a community organization in Florida, the LGBTQ Freedom Fund, had to provide $5,000 to pay for their bond. Once the person was released, they were fitted with an electronic ankle bracelet. When their chains had been removed, the person came to Canada via Roxham Road, and the refugee claim process then started.
There are a number of cases like this, and I will spare you the details about how the families are living...
The Canadian government says it's “modernizing” the safe third country agreement. That's the term it uses. It won't actually tell us what that means and what its plans are in the negotiations with the United States.
What we've seen, of course, is that the government, in a hidden kind of way, expanded the use of the safe third country agreement. In the omnibus budget bill, Bill , a 379-page document, the government snuck in there the safe third country agreement application to the Five Eyes countries. That automatically turns people away if they try to seek asylum here in Canada.
Do you think that's right?
This question is directed to The Refugee Centre. I don't know who wants to respond to that.
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I want to thank Canada for admitting my parents. I am a proud Canadian of Haitian origin, but I am first and foremost of Haitian origin. So I understand the problems and suffering people experience.
In my office, I met with a woman who had been raped by 15 people and saw her husband kill himself. She came to Canada when she was pregnant and she is left on her own. I think we have a duty to show that we really are a society and a country that has values.
I definitely suggest that a work permit be granted as quickly as possible and a social insurance number be assigned automatically at the same time. That would enable people to start working right away.
I suggest that a way be found to bring people to the regions by giving them incentives to encourage them not to all stay in the same place, and so avoid a possible housing shortage, for one thing. I am very much in favour of that idea.
I also believe that changes have to be made to the immigration process. I thank the lawyers for all the work they do for refugee claimants. I know the COVID-19 pandemic meant they had to use a new portal. I think the virtual interviews or hearings are completely devoid of humanity, particularly when a refugee claimant is not sitting beside their lawyer or has a wi-fi connection that doesn't work.
So we have a lot of work to do, to find a way that will reassure people so they are able to make their voice heard and feel accepted here.
:
I call the meeting to order.
On behalf of all the members of this committee, I would like to welcome our witnesses for this panel.
Today in this panel we are joined by Ms. Maureen Silcoff, lawyer and past president of the Canadian Association of Refugee Lawyers. We are also joined by Ms. Perla Abou-Jaoudé, lawyer, and Mr. Vincent Desbiens, lawyer, from the Quebec Immigration Lawyers Association. Finally, we have Stephan Reichhold, director general, Table de concertation des organismes au service des personnes réfugiées et immigrantes.
You will have five minutes for your opening remarks.
Ms. Silcoff, please begin.
:
Thank you for the invitation to appear.
The Canadian Association of Refugee Lawyers is a national organization engaged in advocacy, litigation and education regarding the rights of refugees and migrants.
As noted last week, no one chooses to be a refugee, and people who cross into Canada between ports of entry are desperate to find safety. One crossing haunts me. A woman traumatized by gender-based violence in her home country, barred from seeking refugee protection in the U.S. and desperate not to be deported to further harm crossed into Canada with her two minor children by hanging on to the back of a freight train. She was later accepted as a refugee.
When this committee looked at the agreement back in 2002, it anticipated that if irregular entry became an issue and if the numbers did not decrease, the agreement should be suspended or ended.
I'll explain why it's time to revisit the STCA based on five lessons learned, and then I'll offer a recommendation.
Lesson one is that the mode of entry to Canada says nothing about the merits of a refugee claim. Acceptance rates are very similar regardless of how you arrive. The acceptance rates for refugee cases decided on their merits generally is 66%, and the acceptance rate for irregular crossers is 61%.
Lesson two is that the STCA is the cause of Roxham Road, and ending the agreement or creating more exceptions to it will disperse people from coast to coast and eliminate the funnel to Quebec. Cities and provinces throughout Canada can then provide settlement services.
Lesson three is that the number of border entries may not increase, as people may simply be rerouted. In fact, Althia Raj recently reported a senior IRCC official noting that an end to the STCA means that the situation “might not change that much, because what would happen is you wouldn’t have a Roxham Road, the people could cross at the ports of entry and they might therefore go to different ports of entry”.
The federal court thought the same thing. In its 2020 decision, it indicated that there was actually no evidence that numbers would increase if the STCA ended and, further, that the departments have always managed ebbs and flows. Recall of course that our geographic location means that Canada will always welcome only a very small drop in the global bucket of refugees.
Lesson four is that although there's talk of modernization, expansion will drive more people to enter irregularly, undetected and without any kind of screening, and of course it will put more lives at risk.
Lesson five is that people who enter through Roxham Road contribute to Canada in meaningful ways. This includes a significant number of guardian angels, those who risked their lives during the height of the pandemic working in long-term care homes and elsewhere.
The conclusion we can draw is that the deleterious effects of the STCA at this point clearly outweigh its benefits.
One option, of course, is to end or suspend the STCA, but there's an alternative. Article 6 of the STCA allows Canada to exempt classes of people or individuals on public policy grounds. It states the following: “either Party may at its own discretion examine any refugee status claim made to that Party where it determines that it is in its public interest to do so.” This provides the much-needed flexibility to address current issues.
Canada now uses only one public policy exemption. That's for individuals facing the death penalty. There used to be a second one, as mentioned earlier, for people who are on Canada's list of countries to which we don't deport. That was ended in 2009.
Options at this point could include expanding exemptions and allowing for gender-based claims, which, despite the repeal of the matter of A-B-, remain subject to highly problematic restrictions. In fact, the UNHCR recommended using public policy exemptions when it commented on Canada's draft regulations back in 2002, and this included for gender-based claims.
As well, exemptions could be created for vulnerable people who are turned around at the border and put into U.S. jails. Of course, the images of kids in cages offer a horrific window into the system that jails vulnerable people when they're simply seeking safety.
Public policy exemptions have been a mainstay of our immigration system. It makes sense to put them to use at this point.
:
Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for your invitation.
The Quebec Immigration Lawyers Association, the QILA, was founded over 30 years ago and has more than 460 member lawyers who work in the specific field of immigration and refugee protection.
The QILA submits that the only solution for protecting the health, safety and security of refugee claimants is to abolish the safe third country agreement. Without that agreement, there would be a better distribution of the number of refugee claimants in Canada. As well, it would offer them better access to the social and legal services they need, all without resulting in any increase in refugee claims.
However, because of that agreement, a majority of refugee claimants enter in Quebec and make a claim at the time of entry, and this has significant repercussions for people who have already suffered too much. Refugee claimants are arriving in Quebec, but the system is already overloaded. We have to keep in mind that these human beings who arrive at our border do so in the hope of obtaining Canada's protection, since their lives are in danger. Their quest can be successful only if we offer them the tools they need for making their claims in the proper way, and obviously that calls for access to justice.
Some people are not able to find a lawyer, and that interferes with making their claims, and so prevents them from obtaining the security they are seeking, in the long term. Obviously, the inability to gain access to justice causes great psychological and emotional distress for these newcomers, in the short and medium terms. As lawyers on the ground, we see this every day. Not only do refugee claimants have trouble finding a lawyer, but they also have trouble finding help from organizations that provide housing assistance, for example.
Some people will say that while refugee claimants arrive in Quebec, they can quickly move elsewhere in Canada. In reality, the situation are quite different.
First, their mobility is limited, because they have to wait for their work permit in the mail, to be able to support themselves as soon as possible. They are living in a financially precarious state, when it is already difficult to access housing and the price of food is constantly going up. During this time, all of the social services available to help them integrate start in Quebec, in both legal and social terms. Once claimants have found a lawyer, rented a place to live and enrolled their children in school, it becomes a lot more difficult for them to go and live somewhere else. Obviously, we need to come up with a faster system for issuing work permits.
At the same time, we can't ignore the fact that when they arrive in Canada, these migrants can't be the given humane, calm guidance they deserve by border personnel. Because of the huge volume of claims, border personnel do not have the time needed to make sure the claimants properly understand the information that is essential to their case, and this causes major anxiety. Their psychological and emotional security suffers enormously, particularly in a system where the process is increasingly complex and calls for access to technology, something these newcomers only very rarely have. Everything happens within very short regulatory time frames.
In some cases, families are separated and it is hard for family members to access information about the others, for example if one of the family members is detained or hospitalized. That causes stress and panic for every family member who doesn't know the fate of the other one. Too often, they arrive at our offices in a state of disorientation and in extremely insecure circumstances. The lawyer then has to make up for the government officials by informing these people properly about their claim process.
To conclude, some resources have been put in place to try to spread claimants more evenly across Canada, which the safe third country agreement prevents. On that point, some people have been transferred from Quebec to Ontario. Unfortunately, some of them did not understand what was happening or did not want to change provinces. They really had no desire to go and live in Ontario and go through another migratory journey, having already suffered enough to get to Canada.
Some people detained in Quebec have been transferred to a detention centre in Ontario, while their entire family was living in Quebec, not in detention. Once a person was released, they had to make their own way back to Quebec. We can't imagine the anxiety experienced by the families at the thought of that kind of separation. We respectfully submit that these attempts to mitigate the situations that result from this agreement simply exacerbate the situation, in addition to being unsuccessful and counterproductive.
As well, simply closing Roxham Road would be even more devastating than the status quo if we kept the safe third country agreement. Keep in mind the many migrants who put their lives and security in danger by trying to cross our border in the middle of winter or by going through dangerous areas. Closing Roxham Road would not stop refugee claimants from coming to Canada, but if they crossed the border just anywhere, that would reduce the government's capacity to identify them quickly, as it can now do using their fingerprints and identity papers.
Ultimately, we respectfully submit that because of the safe third country agreement, the safety, security and health of migrant individuals and families are endangered not just in the short term, but also in the long term.
The repercussions extend over several years and can even ultimately strip our refugee claim system of its meaning: that people who deserve safety will be given Canada's protection.
Thank you.
:
Thank you, Madam Chair.
Good evening, everyone.
I am the director of the Table de concertation des organismes au service des personnes réfugiées et immigrantes, whose members are 160 intake and settlement support organizations dedicated to assisting newcomers, whether they be refugees, immigrants, or persons without status.
My considerations will be focused more on the social and health aspects, given that the legal aspects have been dealt with well by all the lawyers who are here today. I am going to talk more about the current views of these organizations. As was said just now, there is a humanitarian health emergency in Quebec at the moment. Everyone is aware of it, but action still needs to be taken.
I don't know whether the support system in Quebec that has existed for several decades and is unique in Canada is familiar to you. If a refugee claimant, whether regular or irregular, arrives in Canada and needs help with housing, it will be provided by Quebec's social services, more specifically by PRAIDA, the Programme régional d'accueil et d'intégration des demandeurs d'asile. That organization will provide temporary accommodation for three or four weeks, on average, until they receive their first social assistance cheque. After that, they are politely asked to leave the temporary accommodation facility and make their own arrangements.
That worked well over recent years, but because of the current volume of refugee claims, the system is no longer functioning. In fact, the Quebec government has informed the federal government that it was capping its housing capacity. I think it is 1,200 beds, more or less. The federal government also places people in hotels, 14 at the moment, in the Montreal region. That accommodation is temporary, but it does not include any services; medical and social services are provided by Quebec's social services.
That puts enormous pressure on the organizations that ordinarily try to help refugee claimants, as my colleague Frantz André explained when he talked about his work. As is the case in the rest of Canada, those organizations, which are mostly charitable groups, do not receive money and so have to self-finance with support from foundations or by fund-raising.
It also has to be said that the services are very limited. In Quebec as elsewhere in Canada, refugee claimants are entitled to very little, which really can be summarized as essential services, such as basic medical coverage. It is estimated that since January, Quebec has taken in nearly 45,000 people out of the 72,000 refugee claimants who have arrived in Canada, whether regular or irregular, a distinction that no one makes when it comes to services or housing, in fact.
Settlement aid organizations are saturated and have no more capacity. As well, as was said earlier, the caseload is increasingly disturbing, and this causes overflow into the community networks that are responsible for non-immigrants, such as organizations working for families, youth, homeless people and women. Those organizations do their best to lend these individuals a hand and help them survive.
With winter now on its way, we are very worried. We really are at a breaking point in the Montreal region because of the volume of refugee claims. While that volume does not compare with what is happening in Europe or at the Mexican border, it still puts a lot of pressure on volunteer organizations.
We are proposing, and we are asking the federal government to establish, a system of longer-term accommodation, perhaps with Quebec's ministère de la Sécurité publique and the Red Cross, at least during the winter and especially for the most vulnerable families. Given the housing crisis, it is virtually impossible to find a place to live. The occupancy rate at shelters for homeless people is therefore rising, something we absolutely want to avoid. That is one of our recommendations for the federal government.
The situation that prevails between Canada and Quebec brings to mind a divorced couple who can't agree on custody of the kids. Each one volleys the ball back to the other and they both argue all the time, so the children are left on their own. That is kind of what the current situation for refugee claimants looks like.
It is important for the federal government and Quebec to agree on implementing emergency measures...
:
Thank you, Madam Chair.
I would like to thank all of the witnesses who are here as we do this important study.
Mr. Reichhold, I think it is relatively obvious that we have to distinguish between closing Roxham Road and suspending the safe third country agreement. They are two completely different things. I sincerely agree with you that if we try to put up a fence, there is a good chance that people will try to get around it.
I want to address the AQAADI representatives and I think it was you, Mr. Abou-Jaoudé, who is going to be answering questions.
I heard Mr. Desbiens say in his presentation that there were gaps in terms of access, not just access to certain necessary tools, including the services of a lawyer, for example, but also access to certain other basic services. Can you tell us about that in more depth?
:
I think my colleague Frantz André gave a good description of the situation he is experiencing as a helper.
As we speak, there are people outside with no coat, no clothing, who haven't eaten in three days. This phenomenon is very concentrated around the hotels leased by the federal government in Saint-Laurent, Ahuntsic or Bordeaux-Cartierville, and is now spilling over into La Petite-Patrie and Villeray. We are talking about thousands of people.
Last week, there were nearly 5,000 people in temporary accommodation, both federal and Quebec. They stay there for about three to four weeks. Then, once they leave the temporary accommodation, they are left on their own. So they go out and knock on every door. There are fewer and fewer doors to knock on.
With a cheque of $750 per adult, they can't find housing or feed a family. There are a lot of children among that number. We are also seeing a significant rise in the number of pregnant women, who are unable to see a doctor.
I call that a humanitarian emergency. Governments have to take responsibility and put resources in place, as they do in the case of natural disasters.
:
Here again, I think it's really useful to look at the very specific categories or classes of people who are experiencing lack of safety and serious deficiencies in the system. If the system doesn't function properly, people are at risk of refoulement, which means that they would be sent back to their country of origin to experience further persecution.
I was trying to speak before about the one-year bar. People who don't make an asylum claim right away can't enter into the asylum system. There are lots of reasons why people may not come forward—because they're traumatized, because they're ashamed, because of cultural reasons—so this particularly impacts gender-based claims.
We know that people may not come forward with their claim, and then if they turn up at the border and they're rejected because of the STCA, then they really have a problem in the U.S. because then they're in a system where they can't access the U.S. asylum system. So that's another category.
Also, there are people facing detention. We know that Canada treats detention very differently from the U.S. In Canada, detention is seen, both according to the case law and the policies, as a last resort. The UNHCR specifies that people seeking protection should only be detained as a last resort. The United States sees detention very differently. They see it as an immigration management tool. This was exacerbated during the Trump administration, but it pre-existed the Trump administration and it exists today. When somebody is in jail in the U.S., they're experiencing very serious difficulties, and that's very different from Canada, so that's another category of people who are vulnerable.
:
I'm sorry for interrupting. Time is up for Ms. Kwan.
With that, our panel comes to an end.
I want to thank all the witnesses for appearing before the committee today. Thanks a lot for your important testimonies. If there is something you would like to bring to the committee's attention, you can always send written submissions to the clerk of the committee. They will be circulated to all the members, and we will consider them when we come to the drafting stage.
With that, we will suspend this meeting. All those members of Parliament who are participating virtually will have to log off and then log in to the in camera meeting for our committee business.
All the witnesses can leave the meeting.
Members, please log off and then log in for the in camera portion of the meeting. We will have a few minutes for committee business.
[Proceedings continue in camera]