:
I call this meeting to order.
Welcome to meeting number 44 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 this meeting.
Before we get to the witnesses for today, I would like to confirm that the is prepared to appear on Tuesday, November 29, on the supplementary estimates (B) and Canada's immigration levels plan, 2023-25. The Tuesday meeting will be with the minister. I wanted to confirm that with everyone.
On December 2, we will have our final panel on conditions faced by asylum seekers, and then a subcommittee meeting to discuss future business, as requested by members at the last meeting.
On December 6, we are planning to begin our study on the government's response to the final report of the Special Committee on Afghanistan.
On Friday, December 9, we will provide drafting instructions for our report on the conditions faced by asylum seekers.
Yes, Mr. Redekopp.
:
Thank you, Mr. Brunelle-Duceppe.
I will address this and get back to you as I get more information.
With that, I want to inform you that we will have a few minutes at the end to go through committee business about the issue put for Friday, last Tuesday.
We can now go to our witnesses.
I would like to welcome all witnesses appearing before the committee. Today, we are joined by the Immigration and Refugee Board, represented by Richard Wex, chairperson and chief executive officer; Roula Eatrides, deputy chairperson, refugee protection division; and Gary Dukeshire, senior counsel.
We are also joined by the Canada Border Services Agency, represented by Aaron McCrorie, vice-president, intelligence and enforcement; and Carl Desmarais, director general, enforcement.
We also have witnesses from the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, represented by Michael Duheme, deputy commissioner; and Superintendent Martin Roach, acting criminal operations officer, C division.
Welcome to all of the witnesses. You will have five minutes for your opening remarks.
We will begin with the Immigration and Refugee Board.
Please begin.
:
Thank you, Madam Chair.
As you mentioned, I'm joined today by Ms. Roula Eatrides, deputy chairperson of the refugee protection division, and Mr. Gary Dukeshire, our senior counsel.
I know the committee is particularly interested in IRB's refugee claims inventory, wait times and projections, so I'll get right to the point and dispense with the usual introduction about our role and mandate in the context of the asylum system. I assume you are well briefed on that.
[Translation]
When I testified before the committee for the first time as the new chair of the Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada in 2018, the operating environment was very challenging.
[English]
A surge in refugee claims, both regular and irregular, has far outstripped the IRB's annual processing capacity, leading to the largest backlog and longest wait times in the board's 30-year history.
At the time, we assessed that, without interventions, the backlog would reach well over 200,000 claims by 2022-23, with wait times in excess of six years for a first-level refugee determination. The system, in our view, at that time, was on the brink of collapse. As a result, in 2018-19, the IRB responded by developing an ambitious growth and transformation agenda.
[Translation]
As we are now in the fourth year of implementing our plan, I'd like to tell you about some key outcomes, along with a brief summary of future challenges.
I'll begin by talking about growth.
[English]
Since 2018-19, the board has received significant temporary investments by way of successive federal budgets, which allowed us to effectively double our decision-making output and better align IRB's annual processing capacity with the refugee claim intake.
This was a massive scaling-up in a relatively short amount of time for our organization. This growth, coupled with internal efficiencies and pandemic-related border restrictions, led to improved access to justice for existing claimants in our inventory, as measured by the number of claims adjudicated and a reduction in wait times.
Most recently, budget 2022 announced that the funds previously provided in recent budgets to the IRB, on a temporary basis, will be made permanent, and that the IRB will also receive additional funds over two years to process additional claims.
[Translation]
Subject to the approval of Parliament, these funds will allow our organization not only to stabilize at the current levels, but also to continue to build capacity that can handle the increasing number of asylum claims being received.
[English]
As part of our transformation agenda, we've implemented a range of measures to improve both the efficiency and quality of our decision-making.
[Translation]
One part of the program that I would like to point out is our hearings operating model. The board took advantage of the opportunities created by the pandemic to become a digital organization.
[English]
In 2020-21, during the height of the pandemic, the board moved to a paperless and virtual hearings operating model. All files have since been digitized. Adjudicators now work almost entirely with digital files. An electronic portal has been built and well adopted by the counsel community. Over 98% of our hearings are now held virtually.
Moving to a virtual hearings operating posture allowed the board to protect the health of both our employees and those appearing before the board, while maintaining access to justice during the toughest days of the pandemic. It was key to keeping our inventories and wait times in check. In fact, according to the latest UNHCR global trends report, Canada was one of only four countries, over the previous year, that was able to significantly reduce its inventory of asylum cases at the refugee determination stage during the pandemic.
[Translation]
Thanks to new investments and the new measures implemented under our plan, the refugee protection division and the refugee appeal division handled more asylum claims and calls last year than ever before.
[English]
In 2018-19, when I first appeared at this committee in this capacity, in this very room, wait times were at two years and were growing at a pace not previously seen. Today wait times for new claimants are at 16 months, down 25% from where they were in 2018-19 and down almost 30% from their peak in the spring of 2020. At the end of Q1 of this fiscal year, wait times at the IRB were at their lowest since 2016-17, prior to the unprecedented influx of claimants.
Given the operating context over the last few years, by any measure these are solid results.
Despite these positive developments at the IRB, I do need to be very clear: The tide has now clearly turned. The IRB and certainly the asylum system as a whole are once again under real strain. As you've heard, the pending eligibility inventory at IRCC and CBSA is growing quickly. Their intake this year is projected to be some 90,000-plus claims, well beyond the system's and IRB's annual processing capacity of up to 50,000. Referrals to the board are now outpacing our annual processing capacity, leading once again to growing inventories and wait times, reversing hard-won gains.
[Translation]
We therefore need to redouble our efforts to improve system efficiency and move forward with funding strategies that can deal with these realities, improve access to justice and better support the Canadian refugee determination system.
Thank you.
[English]
Roula will answer all of your questions.
Voices: Oh, oh!
:
Thank you, Madam Chair.
Good afternoon. I am Aaron McCrorie, the vice-president of intelligence and enforcement at the Canada Border Services Agency, or CBSA. I am joined today by my colleague Carl Desmarais, the director general of enforcement at CBSA.
[Translation]
I'd like to speak briefly about the role of the CBSA in processing asylum claims, particularly when they are irregular entries, most of which are at Roxham Road.
Maintaining border security and integrity is a role shared by the CBSA and the RCMP.
[English]
The CBSA is responsible for enforcing legislation at designated ports of entry. The RCMP is responsible for enforcing the law between ports of entry.
When a refugee claimant enters Canada to make an asylum claim, the CBSA's role is to determine that person's admissibility into Canada and the eligibility of their claim under the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, or IRPA.
To date in 2022, the CBSA has received over 2,400 regular refugee claims, mostly from claimants arriving by air. In comparison, this year the CBSA has received over 32,000 irregular arrivals. Of those, more than 97% are in the province of Quebec. Most irregular arrivals are crossing the Canada-U.S. border at Roxham Road. It is not an official border crossing.
Under the safe third country agreement, people seeking refugee protection must make a claim in the first country they arrive in—in this case, either Canada or the U.S.—unless they qualify for an exception. This agreement applies to those making refugee claims at designated ports of entry, but does not apply to asylum seekers entering Canada outside of official border crossings.
[Translation]
That means that unless their ineligibility was previously established, the CBSA cannot deny entry to asylum seekers arriving from the United States at Roxham Road.
[English]
When the RCMP intercepts a person entering between official ports of entry, the person is brought to the nearest port of entry to make a refugee claim. In this case, the nearest port of entry to Roxham Road is Saint-Bernard-de-Lacolle.
Before refugee claimants can leave the port of entry, they first undergo robust health and security screening. This includes biographic and biometric checks, as well as the initiation of security and criminality checks.
[Translation]
The CBSA is committed to processing all asylum claims in a timely manner, but the process can take a while. The time required depends on a number of factors, such as the amount of detailed information supplied by the claimant, the availability of additional information, and whether or not further research is required.
Security screening is an important aspect in assessing eligibility to enter Canada. The process ensures that anyone who wants to enter Canada has not committed any serious offences and does not constitute a security risk to Canada or Canadians.
[English]
Several factors are used to determine an individual's admissibility, such as participation in criminal activities, human rights violations and organized crime activities.
Besides admissibility, CBSA officers must decide if a claim is eligible to be referred to the IRB for a hearing. Factors that determine a claimant's eligibility include whether the claimant has committed a serious crime, made a previous claim in Canada or if the claimant received protection previously in another country.
To ensure that refugee claimants from Roxham Road have a safe, comfortable, and appropriate waiting space while their claim is processed, the CBSA invested in short-term accommodations. We ensure that claimants have access to beds, showers, meals, and medical care, if required, while they are being processed. These are at the regional processing centre near the Saint-Bernard-de-Lacolle point of entry. In light of the unprecedented demands in this area, this is the only CBSA office in Canada that uses temporary structures to accommodate refugee claimants.
The CBSA encourages refugee claimants to enter Canada at designated points of entry. This is to ensure their personal safety, as well as respect for the law. However, the number of irregular arrivals continues to increase. As I have already noted, since January 1, the CBSA processed over 32,000 irregular arrivals in Quebec, mostly at the Roxham Road crossing. We are working very hard to address this surge in volumes, including the reallocation of resources from other regions to support our colleagues in Quebec, sharing the workload with Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada, and creating a digital portal.
In addition, to help speed up processing times, the CBSA began a new process for low risk claimants on November 1. This process allows applicants to be admitted to Canada under conditions during which time they can access social benefits and a work permit. Applicants are then guided to the Canadian refugee protection portal to complete their refugee claim within 45 days.
[Translation]
Whether or not asylum seekers choose to present their claim at an official point of entry, CBSA is committed to treating all those who seek protection in Canada with care and compassion.
[English]
We look forward to answering your questions and working with you to improve our refugee processing centre.
Thank you.
:
Madam Chair, committee members, good afternoon. My name is Mike Duheme. I'm the deputy commissioner for federal policing in the RCMP.
I'm accompanied by Martin Roach who oversees and manages the situation at Roxham Road. Today, we will speak about the RCMP's law enforcement activities at the border.
Canada, like other western countries, is faced with the task of managing increasing irregular migration flows, which involves addressing humanitarian needs while also ensuring that those who could pose a public safety or security threat are not admitted into Canada.
[Translation]
No one is likely to question the fact that the illicit movement of people between points of entry, including the illegal entry of asylum seekers at the border, is an ongoing problem. However, it must not be forgotten that at the heart of this matter we find vulnerable people, including refugees and asylum seekers who have often undertaken a long and perilous voyage to get to Canada. These people are easy prey for human traffickers, operated by transnational organized crime groups known for their acts of violence and other criminal activities.
That's why the RCMP makes every effort to strike a balance between performing its mandate, which is to keep Canada secure, and its responsibility for ensuring that people like these who have been apprehended are treated with compassion and respect, and have access to recourse under the act.
[English]
I would like to take a few minutes to provide some context on the RCMP's approach to enforcing the law at the border to clarify how and when the RCMP's interactions with individuals take place.
With respect to Canadian law, anyone found crossing the Canadian border without reporting at an official port of entry may be arrested by the RCMP. That said, when individuals are intercepted by the RCMP entering illegally between the ports of entry, they are arrested under subsection 11(1) of the Customs Act, but their intentions are not immediately known. As such, a preliminary risk assessment is conducted to determine if there is any threat posed to Canada or Canadians. Background checks are undertaken to see if there has been any prior involvement in illegal activities, including, for example, drug trafficking, connections to organized crime or links to terrorism.
Each situation is assessed individually before a determination is made on how to proceed, that is, whether an individual should remain in RCMP custody pending further investigation, be referred to another police service jurisdiction, or be transferred to the CBSA for the asylum claim to be assessed. It is the totality of the information obtained by the RCMP through a preliminary risk assessment that a search of personal documents is utilized and reviewed to make an assessment of the risk individuals may pose.
It is important to note that the RCMP does not charge those intercepted who are attempting to enter Canada to make an asylum claim, as this would be in contravention of the Immigration Refugee Protection Act, which states that individuals may not be charged with certain offences related to their illegal entry while their refugee claim is being processed.
[Translation]
As for Roxham Road, the RCMP, in compliance with its border integrity role, deploys teams in those areas where the highest levels of activity occur in order to apprehend asylum-seekers, more and more of whom are crossing between the official points of entry.
At the moment, the largest number of illegal migrants is in Quebec, at Roxham Road. From 2017 to 2021, approximately 95% of RCMP interceptions were at this location. As is the case at other locations, each person apprehended by the RCMP at Roxham Road undergoes a thorough background check before the RCMP decides what action to take.
[English]
While the screening process is necessary to effectively discharge the RCMP's mandate to protect the integrity of our borders, our members ensure that these processes are undertaken with humanity and compassion, respecting the rights of irregular migrants and their human dignity.
In order to ensure that balance is met, Canada's approach has been, and continues to be, examined by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees in Canada.
In the spirit of transparency, the RCMP in Quebec has facilitated several visits and offered briefings to UNHCR. We are proud of the fact that the RCMP resources on the ground are doing the job that they are mandated to do, and they are doing it in a professional and exemplary fashion.
[Translation]
Nevertheless, the RCMP's main interest is the ongoing improvement of its efforts to enforce the act at the border. A coordinated border management approach is essential to long-term success, and it would enable the RCMP to achieve its multiple operational objectives, including measures to combat cross-border drug and weapons trafficking, in addition to trafficking in persons and human smuggling.
[English]
We look forward to working with our international partners and our national partners, such as the CBSA and the IRCC, to continue implementing this approach while prioritizing the safety of Canada and Canadians, ensuring the compassionate treatment of irregular migrants.
I would like to thank you for the opportunity to speak about these important issues.
I'm now happy to take any questions.
[Translation]
Thank you.
:
Thank you, Madam Chair.
Thank you to all of the witnesses for being here today. Thanks for all of the important work you're doing with migrants and newcomers to our country. It's great work that you do.
I want to start with the RCMP.
As you know, Quebec has its own police force, so the RCMP is focused on drug awareness, organized crime, national security, those types of things and, of course, border law enforcement.
If you don't know the answers to my questions as follow, please submit them in writing within a fairly short time. We have a report to do, so maybe seven days would be helpful.
Can you please tell the committee how many members make up the C Division of the RCMP?
:
Through the chair, first of all, the wait times for new claims as of, let's say today, for anybody making a new claim at the IRB will be processed within the next 16 months, based on current inventories and trends.
Second, we have about 65,000 in our inventory right now. A third of those are not actionable because we're waiting for either documentation, security screening or this or that.
That leaves about 45,000 in our claims inventory right now that are actionable. They have been heard. They are on the schedule or will be placed on the schedule within the next 11 months. From the IRB's perspective, with what is in our inventory and with what is actionable, they have been or will be scheduled within 11 months.
In terms of things that can be done, the IRB over the past number of years has taken on a pretty ambitious transformation agenda, which I alluded to in my opening remarks, with a real focus on a culture of performance and results. We understand what the asylum seekers have been through. They have a very long journey. It's been a very challenging journey to them. They have faced many challenges on their way to the IRB, including long processing times throughout the process. We've taken that on board. It's been a tough problem, and we've looked at everything from intake to recourse to try to expedite our processing times.
One initiative in particular that I'll speak to, although there are many, is with respect to the task force on less complex claims. This is an initiative that tries to best allocate our resources based on the complexity of the claims in question. This task force is a group of individuals, members of the refugee protection division that Roula heads up, and 10% of the complement are currently dedicated to this group. Over the past four years or so, since this group was established, they have finalized about 20% of the hearings.
What this does is increase access to justice more quickly for those individuals in our inventory and better utilizes our resources. That is one example of many where we have tried to instill and initiate new ideas and new approaches to expedite processing times with good effect.
:
There are a couple of implications I'll speak to quickly.
First and foremost, obviously the incentive to proceed irregularly would no longer be there. That would encourage people to cross at the border, which would disperse the impact on any one area like Roxham Road, which I think people are very familiar with. There are other other aspects to it, obviously.
The safe third country agreement was created for certain purposes: promoting safety, promoting international responsibility sharing and so on, so those things would no longer necessarily be there.
From an operational perspective, obviously the concern is that it's going to result in additional pressure on the asylum system. An operational perspective is different from a humanitarian perspective.
There are basically three buckets. There are irregular border crossers—
:
If we were to suspend it and it were no longer in force, then, obviously, the purposes of the safe third country agreement would no longer be there.
Hence, yes, there is a concern held by some that in suspending the agreement, there would be a pull factor. Nobody knows.... I shouldn't say “nobody knows”. Instead, there are projections; there is some conjecture associated with the degree and extent to which that pull factor would materialize. Nonetheless, we understand that the projections are that there would be a material impact at the border.
When you look back 20 years ago, prior to the safe third country agreement, one of the reasons why the safe third country agreement was put in place was the security perimeter negotiations taking place between Canada and the United States. Those took on more force after 9/11.
One of the files that was discussed at the time was the safe third country agreement, because at that time, about a third of Canada's—
:
Thank you, Madam Chair.
Maybe I'll take this opportunity to reiterate that our processes are in place regardless of whether the STCA is there or not. At Roxham Road, in an effort to deal with volumes, initially we were processing in two parts. We did an initial assessment upon arrival, and then we adjourned the claim for a later date to be finalized in an eligibility interview at the urban processing centre.
As a result of that, what we've seen with the volumes...and we're doing that because it takes four to six hours to do a claim in person. We've seen that eligibility backlog increase due to this two-step process where it's now taking up to 18 months for somebody to get that eligibility interview and to get their documentation.
To address that, we've done a couple of things. One, we've introduced, as I alluded to, what we call our one-step process, where low-risk people and people with full documentation are fully assessed upon arrival. They're allowed to leave. They're given the documentation they require so that they have rights to employment and they have rights to social and medical care. They have to complete their paperwork on our online portal within 45 days. The effect of that is to reduce the growth of the eligibility backlog.
The other innovation we put in place is the use of this digital portal. I've said it takes up to 18 months. That's a worst-case scenario. If individuals provide their information via our online portal, which is more user-friendly, more reliable, and more accurate, they can get an interview within 90 days. That would then close their eligibility claim and they'd move forward in the system.
:
I call the meeting to order.
Thank you to all of the witnesses for appearing before the committee.
Today we are joined by Mr. Stéphane Handfield, as an individual, a lawyer from Handfield et Associés, avocats. We are also joined by Mr. Yannick Boucher, the director of strategic development and research, representing the organization, Accueil liaison pour arrivants. Our third witness today is Madame Marzieh Nezakat, manager, refugee settlement and integration program of the Multilingual Orientation Service Association for Immigrant Communities.
Once we have remarks from all three witnesses, we will go to our round of questioning. We will begin with Mr. Handfield.
Mr. Handfield, you will have five minutes for your opening remarks. You can please begin.
:
Good afternoon. Thank you for the invitation.
I've been a member of the Barreau du Québec since 1992. I was a member at the Immigration and Refugee Commission for 11 years. From 2012 to 2015, I was a lecturer at the Cégep de Saint-Laurent in the administrative techniques program, more specifically in the immigration consultancy program.
I am a member of the Association québécoise des avocats et avocates en droit de l'immigration and the Association des avocats de la défense de Montréal. I practice exclusively in immigration law at Handfield et et associés, avocats. I also work as an inspector on behalf of the Barreau du Québec's professional inspection service.
I contributed to Démantèlement tranquille, published by Éditions Québec Amérique in 2018. I also wrote two works published in 2020 and 2021, respectively, by Wilson et Lafleur, Immigration et criminalité au Canada: quand l'expulsion devient inévitable, and Fatima: le parcours d'une réfugiée.
With any issues connected to the reception of refugees, it's impossible to ignore the safe third country agreement.
Under the agreement, anyone who comes to a Canadian-American border crossing will have their asylum claim deemed ineligible and sent back to the United States, unless they are covered by an exception provided in the agreement; this could, for example, involve an unaccompanied minor or having a family member who lives in Canada.
However, if this person crosses the border irregularly, that person will not be covered by the safe third country agreement and the asylum claim will be considered eligible. That's why so many thousands of people have decided to cross the border irregularly in recent years in order to request Canada's protection. Since January 2022, 99.3% of these arrivals are in Quebec.
Under the safe third country agreement, people are not entitled to appeal to the refugee appeal division in the event of denial of the asylum claim if the claim was made at a land border crossing for regular entry. However, if they cross the border at Roxham Road, they are entitled to appeal the denial of their asylum claim by the Immigration and Refugee Board.
In short, all these factors combined to encourage asylum seekers to cross the border irregularly because their claim will be deemed eligible, they won't be sent back to the United States, and they will have a right of appeal in the event their claim is denied.
The government is aware of the situation, which has lasted for years.
From January to October 2022, more than 30,000 people crossed the border at Roxham Road. If the trend continues, there will be 50,000 by the end of the year. The previous record was set in 2017, when 18,836 asylum seekers crossed the border in this way.
In early October 2022, the mayor of New York City, Eric Adams, said that he expected his city to receive over 100,000 migrants expelled from the state of Texas. He said that approximately one third of these migrants wanted to go to other destinations. We have good reason to believe that one of these destinations will be Roxham Road. In Portland, Maine, there are hundreds of migrants dreaming about Roxham Road.
It's the system, not the people, who need to be condemned. In many instances, these people are being exploited by unscrupulous human traffickers. It's important to know how to welcome them, and even more important to know how to integrate them appropriately and effectively, within our capacity to do so.
In view of the housing crisis, the shortage of openings at day care centres, the shortage of family doctors and teachers, and the challenges of francization, combined with the fact that the immigration system is full of cracks, some people have been talking about a potential humanitarian crisis. Many asylum seekers will also, in spite of themselves, become homeless.
The number of asylum seekers crossing the border at Roxham Road will also have an impact on claim processing delays, and also on the work of the refugee protection division members. It's an issue of interference and deteriorating working conditions for them.
The time has come to firmly shut down this irregular and unofficial access point at the sadly famous Roxham Road.
It's important to underscore the fact that the government of Canada has the power to unilaterally suspend the safe third-party country agreement, under article 10 of this agreement which states: "Either Party may, upon written notice to the other Party, suspend for a period of up to three months application of this Agreement. Such suspension may be renewed for additional periods of up to three months. Either Party may, with the agreement of the other Party, suspend any part of this Agreement."
The status quo is therefore not the answer. All that is needed is a bare minimum of political will. It's high time to do something.
Thank you for your attention.
:
Thank you very much, Madam Chair.
Good afternoon.
We really welcomed today's initiative to draw Parliament's attention to the situation of those who have chosen Canada as a safe haven, as was just mentioned.
As other speakers before me have outlined, the issues and challenges experienced by asylum seekers throughout their settlement trajectory have many implications, human, economic, and, most importantly, structural. I'm referring here to access to employment, housing, legal services, health care, early childhood services and the like.
As an organization that has been on the front lines of immigration and integration for 38 years, today we will present a synthesis of our observations on the ground regarding the realities asylum seekers face in Quebec.
Our objective is to recommend four courses of action that would greatly facilitate the integration of asylum seekers: First, promote access to quality jobs, particularly by granting work permits upon arrival; second, facilitate access to health and psychosocial services for asylum seekers housed in federal hotels in Quebec; third, develop an awareness campaign on the Interim Federal Health Program (IFHP); and fourth, develop transitional housing models to facilitate access to housing.
First, to promote access to quality jobs, we believe it's important to support initiatives that value the skills of asylum seekers and make employers aware of their potential in an unprecedented labour shortage environment. We mustn't forget that the term “asylum seeker” is a status that says nothing about the career trajectory of these individuals.
With support from Services Québec, our organization will be holding the first job fair for asylum seekers this coming December 13. It's a great opportunity for them to break away from informal employment networks that make them vulnerable. It's very important that we point that out.
While we would like to applaud the establishment of a new temporary measure to expedite the issuance of work permits, some questions remain. According to public policy, to obtain a social insurance number, individuals must have their refugee claimant document. Can they get a social insurance number without their refugee claimant document, knowing that claimants can wait up to a year to get an eligibility interview to obtain this document? This interview used to be done on the day the claimant arrived or within 24 hours. That's a year's wait, and it contributes to them working under the table rather than for our businesses in need of workers.
These long processing times take a toll on the psychological health of asylum seekers. We have observed an increase in anxiety and distress due to administrative procedures, particularly those related to legal services, which are currently under pressure in Quebec. They must therefore face uncertainty in addition to the trauma related to their experience in their country of origin and the long road that led him to Canada.
We'd like to point out that asylum seekers housed in federal hotels in Quebec need health and psychosocial services, much like those housed under the provincial initiative Programme régional d'accueil et d'intégration des demandeurs d'asile (PRAIDA).
Furthermore, we recommend that a campaign be developed to raise awareness among frontline health care workers of the Interim Federal Health Program, which is not very well known in Quebec. This program fills a service gap by providing insurance coverage. We also recommend that reference tools be created for administrative officers to help them better understand medical coverage. Such tools would make it easier for them to understand IFHP procedures.
Greater consistency between the IFHP and the Régie de l'assurance maladie du Québec would also facilitate processing and prevent some professionals from giving up on the IFHP because they find the reimbursement process too cumbersome. Service providers' lack of awareness of the IFHP has a direct impact on the health of asylum seekers, which is already precarious.
Finally, we feel that developing transitional housing models for six months to one year as a complement to PRAIDA's temporary housing would support asylum seekers in their search for housing. Quebec is the only province to offer temporary accommodations upon arrival. However, how can someone obtain housing in three weeks without any credit history or references from previous landlords, all in the midst of an affordable housing crisis?
Rising homelessness among asylum seekers is a visible and tangible sign of the difficulties they face in gaining access to affordable housing in Montreal. Transitional housing models can provide a buffer when asylum seekers come out of temporary accommodations to make it easier for them to understand how rentals work and also help them establish a tenant history.
I will stop there.
I'm willing to answer any questions you may have.
Thank you.
:
Thank you for the opportunity to appear on this very important subject.
My name is Marzieh Nezakat, and I am the manager of refugee settlement and integration at MOSAIC.
MOSAIC is one of the largest not-for-profit organizations in Canada, serving immigrant, refugee and mainstream communities throughout the province of B.C. and overseas via online programs. MOSAIC is also one of the largest organizations funded by the province to serve refugee claimants in partnership with other agencies across B.C.
At MOSAIC, I oversee programs that serve approximately 2,000 refugee claimants each year. I also oversee the B.C. refugee claimant housing referral and data management system, BC CHARMS, the first of its kind in western Canada. This province-wide centralized housing referral system aims at connecting refugee claimants with safe and affordable housing across the province of B.C.
Today, I would like to take time to highlight some of the experiences of refugee claimants served by MOSAIC relating to their safety, security and health.
At Christmastime 2021, I received a call from the Red Cross about a family of 11 who had irregularly crossed the border and were intercepted by the RCMP. They were covered in mud, hungry and robbed and looking for shelter and food.
A young woman in her twenties, crossing the border irregularly and not intercepted, had somehow found her way to MOSAIC's office in the late afternoon. She was soaking wet and shaking, repeatedly asking in her native language if we were going to send her back to the border or if she was going to be deported.
After irregularly crossing the border and being intercepted by the RCMP, a pregnant woman in her seventh month, whose husband was deported at the U.S., was sent to MOSAIC to receive support for food and shelter. She was then called to the CBSA office, detained for the night and sent back to the U.S. Her cousin told us later about her difficult situation at the immigration holding centre the night before she was sent back.
A single mom and three young children were found by the VPD on the streets of Vancouver around midnight. A VPD officer had a connection with a church that took care of them for the night before sending them to MOSAIC.
Over the past two months, MOSAIC has received two families who, as indicated by the STCA, were found ineligible to make a claim in Canada. With an exclusion order banning them to re-entry Canada for a year, they crossed the border irregularly and found their way to MOSAIC for help.
The amount of trauma these families with their young kids have gone through is beyond expression, considering the fact that many of these individuals might have been subject to human trafficking to make their way to Canada. Not having their status, the guilt and shame of having crossed the border irregularly and having been denied a refugee claim has a toll on these refugee claimants.
According to IRCC statistics from January to October of this year, the number of refugee claimants intercepted by the RCMP in B.C. has increased by 133% compared with the same time last year, and 30% compared with the prepandemic time in 2019 for refugee claimants who crossed the border without being intercepted or having made a claim inland.
When claiming at official ports of entry, claimants can immediately apply for income assistance, which is received in less than three weeks, and receive a deadline of less than two months for their eligibility interview. If found eligible, they can anticipate receiving a work permit in three to four months. However, when making a claim inland, the claim process takes months longer and claimants are left with no income assistance and delayed work permits of up to 18 months, which makes earning a living nearly impossible.
Knowing these drawbacks to making a claim inland, why would refugee claimants take the risk of irregularly crossing the border? The answer is the risk of being deported or returned to the U.S. The majority of individuals who cross the border have exhausted their financial resources in making their way from their countries of origin into transitory countries and on to South America, continuing through the U.S. and eventually reaching Canada.
By not being able to obtain a work permit in a timely manner, they are left with seeking aid by the community or settlement agencies, or, as their last resort, working illegally, which by itself is a whole different story about getting exposed to discrimination, stigmatization and all sorts of potential abuse by employers.
In closing, I want to remind the respective committee and community that despite all the challenges refugee claimants face, they have contributed and continue to contribute immensely to Canada's social fabric. MOSAIC recognizes that seeking asylum is a human right, along with the humanitarian principles of impartiality, independence and neutrality that we seek in our daily practices.
Thank you again for the opportunity to speak today. I look forward to your questions.
:
Thank you very much, Madam Chair.
I'd like to thank the witnesses for being here.
First off, I'd like to thank the committee members for giving me the opportunity to take the floor and ask questions today.
Whether it happens at Roxham Road or elsewhere in Canada, as Ms. Nezakat just pointed out, irregular immigration is a major concern. We're talking about people crossing the border illegally. What we tend to forget is that, first and foremost, these are people and families who have gone through difficult times before they decided to come to Canada. These are, above all, human stories. Unfortunately, we overlook that reality a little too often in the whole process.
I can confirm that we hear sad stories every day in our constituency offices. I'm thinking of a recent example where an individual who had entered Canada at Roxham Road with their family and was well integrated into the community was just ordered deported. This leads me to say that we probably have issues in terms of how we welcome people; we're not giving them a proper welcome.
Roxham Road is an alternative that you seem to disagree with, Mr. Handfield, since you're calling for the suspension of the Safe Third Country Agreement. In practical terms, what would suspending the agreement change for people who cross the border illegally?
:
That's a tough question to answer.
I've been working on the Roxham Road issue since 2017. It's important to reiterate the government's position on this issue. In the summer of 2020, following a challenge, the Federal Court struck down the Safe Third Country Agreement. The government could have acknowledged the decision at that time and acted accordingly. Instead, it appealed. That went all the way to the Supreme Court and we're awaiting the decision, which is expected in the next few weeks.
Why hasn't the government budged on this issue, when all the stakeholders are advocating for the suspension of the agreement? As I said at the outset, Article 10 of the agreement allows the government to unilaterally suspend the agreement for three months, without even requiring authorization from the U.S. government. It would therefore be very easy for the government to suspend the agreement and see how things play out on the ground. If some people's fears are realized and Canada were to receive 100,000 or 200,000 new asylum seekers, government could opt to reinstate the agreement. The situation may also remain stable.
We could do that. Why don't we do that? You would need to ask the that question.
:
I think it's a mistake to compare the two asylum systems. The situation in the United States is quite different from that in Canada. Canada is much more open and has much more flexible criteria for recognizing that a person is a refugee. Let me give you some examples.
First, sexual orientation. A person seeking asylum in the United States on the basis of sexual orientation could not be recognized as a refugee by the U.S. immigration court. Conversely, in Canada, membership in what's called a particular social group is grounds for recognition as a refugee.
Then there's the fact that a person fears certain crime groups in their country of origin. That is not a recognized ground in the United States, whereas it is in Canada. Those are obviously major differences.
The two systems also have different views on the detention of migrants. In Canada, this is the exception: migrants are detained in purpose-built immigration detention centres that house women, children and families. In the United States, migrants seeking asylum are instead held in common law prisons, alongside criminals, sometimes even hardened criminals like murderers.
The two systems are completely different. In fact, that's why the Federal Court struck down the agreement in 2020. The system was seen as different, and, contrary to popular belief, the United States was not a safe third country for people who feared persecution if they were to return to their home country.
:
I'm sorry for interrupting, Madam Nezakat, but the time is up for Ms. Kwan.
With that, our panel comes to an end.
I want to thank all of the witnesses for appearing before the committee and providing important information.
If there is something you would like to bring to the committee's attention, you can always put it in writing and send it to clerk of the committee. That will be circulated to the members of the committee as we finalize the report.
With that, this panel comes to an end. I thank all of the witnesses. They can leave.
For members of the committee, please log off from this public meeting and then log in for the in camera meeting so that we can do the committee business.
With that, the meeting is suspended.
[Proceedings continue in camera]