Calls grow for asylum seekers working on COVID-19 front lines to be allowed to stay in Canada - Action News
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Calls grow for asylum seekers working on COVID-19 front lines to be allowed to stay in Canada

Many of those working long hours through the pandemic in low-paying jobs few Canadians want to do have already had their refugee claims rejected and may be sent back to their home countries when the crisis is over.

Legaults CAQ voted against motion to ask Ottawa to 'regularize status' of those with rejected refugee claims

Fabrice Vil, a Montrealer of Haitian background and the founder of Pour3Points, released a video in support of asylum seekers in essential jobs. (Simon Martel/CBC)

The COVID-19 pandemic has shone a light on the crucial role asylum seekers and others with precarious status play in Quebec's economy.

They work long hours in meat-packing plants and warehouses, or tending to elderly people in long-term care homes low-paying jobs that are difficult to fill.

But they may not be able to stay in Canadawhen deportations, which have nearly ground to a halt during the COVID-19 crisis, resume.

There are growing calls, however,from community organizers, advocates and opposition politicians in both Quebec and Ottawa for that to change.

"What we realize more and more is that those failed claimants are working in essential services most of the time," said Guillaume Cliche-Rivard, the president of Quebec's association of immigration lawyers.

About 30,000asylum seekers who crossed into Canada between 2017 and December 2019are still waiting for their refugee claims to be heard, according to the latest figures from theImmigration and Refugee Board of Canada.

Others whose claims have been rejected have applied for permanent residency on humanitarian grounds.

That process takes an average of 30 months, Cliche-Rivard said.

In the meantime, they are working.

While the province says it hasno record ofthe total number of asylum seekers doing work in, for example,long-term care homes,Marjorie Villefranche, executive director of Maison d'Haiti, estimates that about 1,200 of the 5,000 Haitian asylum seekers the organization has helped since 2017 have become orderlies.

Cliche-Rivard said the federal government should set up a program that speeds up the application process for permanent residency, andformally takes into account the contributions claimants have made to fast-track their application.

Doing so would offer "clear recognition of what those people have been doing for the province and for the country," he said.

NDP wants a 'special program'

The federalNDP is also calling on Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to create a special program granting permanent residency to those working on the front lines.

"They are risking their lives to support others in the face of the pandemic," said Jenny Kwan, the party'simmigration critic andthe MP for Vancouver East.

Her party has tabled a petition on behalf of a Montreal community group that calls on Trudeau to, "show leadership by implementing a special program to regularize the status of asylum seekers working to fight COVID-19, and therefore supporting the health and safety of all Canadians, for humanitarian reasons."

Jenny Kwan, the federal NDP's immigration critic, is calling on the prime minister to create a special program for asylum seekers already in the country. (Ashley Burke/CBC)

Federal Immigration Minister Marco Mendicino has given no indication the government plans to change the way it processes applications or make any exceptions.

But he said in a statement that, "all eligible asylum claimants receive a full and fair hearing on the individual merits of their claim."

"Asylum claimants are allowed to work or study and receive basic health-care coverage."

Legault's party votes down proposal

Peter Kent, the federal Conservative immigration critic, suggested that Quebec, which has jurisdiction over immigration when it comes to economic applicants, "could move to accept these people as permanent residents" given the "extraordinary circumstances."

It's not clear if Quebec would have the power to do that or if Premier Franois Legault's government, which cut immigration levels in its first year in office, would be willing to if it could.

Last week, on the National Assembly's first day back in session, independent MNA Catherine Fournier tabled a motion to recognize the contribution of "hundreds of asylum seekers, mostly of Haitian origin," working in long-term care homes.

She said the province should ask Ottawa to, "quickly regularize their status, in order to recognize the work accomplished during the current health crisis."

Quebec's three opposition parties the Liberals, Qubec Solidaire and the Parti Qubcois voted in favour of the motion, but Legault's majority Coalition Avenir Qubec voted it down.

When asked why, Legault avoided answering directly, saying instead he didn't want the border to reopen to asylum seekers any time soon.

"That doesn't mean that asylum seekers, including members of the Haitian community that there aren't good people who work in our long-term care homes," Legault said Friday.

Frantz Benjamin, the Liberal MNA for Viau, which includes Montral-Nord, said Legault's response was shocking.

"It was not based on the question asked by the journalist," Benjamin, who was born in Haiti, said Tuesday.

"Those people that we call 'guardian angels,' we need them. We have to recognize the work of those people, most of them women."

'Let's walk together'

Over the weekend, a group of activists, artists and social entrepreneurs released a video paying tribute to asylum seekers in essential jobs.

The video came out Monday, on Haiti's National Flag Day, which fell on the same day as Journe des Patriotes in Quebec this year.

"Both celebrations are about liberation movements," said Fabrice Vil, a Montrealer of Haitian background and the founder of Pour3Points, an organization that trains sports coaches to help support kids struggling at school and at home.

He helped produce the video, called Je me souviendrai - Marchons Unis a play on Quebec's official motto, "I remember," followed by, "Let's walk together."

The song in the video is set to the melody of La Dessalinienne, Haiti's national anthem.

"The current pandemic is really showing that we all depend on each other and that there are people that sometimes we don't see as being relevant to our own lives who are currently sacrificing their own lives to support the collectivity," Vil said.

WATCH |Why Quebec has the worst COVID-19 outbreak in Canada:

Why Quebec has the worst COVID-19 outbreak in Canada

4 years ago
Duration 5:55
The Quebec government's handling of the pandemic may explain why the province has the worst outbreak in Canada.

With files from Daybreak

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