Temporary Foreign Worker Program complaints began in 2006 - Action News
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Temporary Foreign Worker Program complaints began in 2006

The Conservative government began hearing complaints about the Temporary Foreign Worker Program as far back as 2006, with issues ranging from concerns about not enough workers to alleged abuse of the system, according to correspondence between ministers and MPs analyzed by CBC's Power & Politics.

Program complaints ranged from not enough workers to alleged abuses

History of complaints over foreign worker program

10 years ago
Duration 2:51
The government began hearing complaints about the Temporary Foreign Worker Program as far back as 2006, many of them from Tory MPs in Alberta

The Conservative government began hearing complaints about the Temporary Foreign Worker Program as far back as 2006, with issues ranging from concerns about not enough workers to alleged abuse of the system.

The complaints were passed along byMPs who wrote letters and emails to the ministers who have been responsible for the program since 2006.

According to an initial analysis of documents by CBC News'sPower & Politics, obtained through access to information, most of the concerns came from Conservative MPs in Alberta.

On July 6, 2009, Conservative MP Rob Merrifield, wrote:"I have received quite a few complaints from Canadian workers who havebeen laid off during this recession, only to discover that their TFWcounterparts are still employed."

On Oct. 3, 2011, Conservative MP Chris Warkentin wrote: "Alberta currently faces a shortage of workers in the service industry particularly in the food and beverage sector. The [redacted] reliesheavily on foreign workers to fill out a third of its staff."

To find out more, click the video above and watch the excerpt from Power and Politics. You can also look at the documents yourself below.