Wednesday, March 30, 2016

Wednesday, March 23, 2016

IMMIGRATION, LANGAUGE AND PUBLIC POLICY

Before it was Albertans in Ottawa and their English language obsession.

·         While they obsessed, Alberta’s economy went down the drain.

Now it’s Quebeckers in Ottawa and their French language obsession.

·         While they obsess, Quebec’s economy is going down the drain.

Quebec and Alberta are free to sacrifice their economies at the altar of cultural and linguistic fantasies.

Now the Quebeckers have joined the Albertans in savaging an engine of Ontario’s economy … immigration

The Quebeckers forget that they did not win the election … the Albertans lost.

Maybe it’s time for Ontario to declare itself a sanctuary province and leave the Canadian economic twilight zone.


Watch for a GTHA revolt of Trumpian proportions.

Richard Boraks, March 23 2016 
Canada to Make it Easier to Hire French Speakers for Skilled Jobs Outside Quebec

The government of Canada has announced that it will soon be simpler for employers in some regions of Canada to hire French-speaking skilled workers through a new option known as Mobilité Francophone.

In an expansion of the International Mobility Program (IMP), Mobilité Francophone will exempt Canadian employers from the Labour Market Impact Assessment process when they hire francophone foreign workers in managerial, professional and technical/skilled trades occupations (NOC skill level 0, A or B) to work in francophone minority communities outside Quebec. This new option is scheduled to come into operation on June 1, 2016.

A LMIA is a document that serves as proof that there will be a positive or neutral impact to the Canadian labour market if an employer hires a foreign national in certain situations. The IMP is an umbrella program that includes all streams of work permit applications that are exempt from this requirement. Mobilité Francophone is the latest such stream, joining other IMP streams such as the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) and the International Experience Canada (IEC) program.

Exemptions from the LMIA process are based on:

broader economic, cultural or other competitive advantages for Canada; and
reciprocal benefits enjoyed by Canadians and permanent residents.
Canada’s Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship, John McCallum, made it clear that the Liberal government has high hopes for this initiative, not only for local economies and Canadian employers, but also for the foreign workers themselves. Giving foreign workers who arrive in Canada under this stream the means to transition to permanent resident status is a clear goal of the government.

“We want francophone minority communities in Canada to continue to be vibrant and growing. That’s why we’re going to encourage skilled francophone workers to come to Canada and settle in communities outside of Quebec, and we’re going to encourage them to apply for permanent residence if they would like to stay,” said Mr. McCallum.

At the time of writing, it remains unclear exactly what criteria may be applied in order to define which communities (and consequently, which employers) will be able to participate in the Mobilité Francophone stream.

While the majority of francophones in Canada live and work in the province of Quebec, many regions across the country continue to have vibrant francophone communities. The working language of many of these communities is generally English, but French retains an important role in the community. More than one million Canadians outside Quebec report French as being their mother tongue. The largest francophone communities outside Quebec are in Eastern Ontario and New Brunswick, but sizeable francophone communities are found in each province and territory.

The department of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC, formerly known as CIC) aims to have francophone newcomers make up at least 4 percent of all economic immigrants settling outside Quebec by 2018, with an additional target of 4.4 percent by 2023.



Read more at http://www.cicnews.com/2016/03/canada-easier-hire-french-speakers-skilled-jobs-quebec-037478.html#OqbmIVUEdQDl3f5b.99

Richard Boraks, March 23 2016

Monday, March 21, 2016

Sofrimento e Redenção

A minha equipe e eu desejamos a todos os membros da Comunidade uma Páscoa alegre. Durante esta quadra celebramos a alegria depois de um grande sofrimento.

Durante as celebrações, não nos esqueçamos de que Jesus nos disses para considerar os estrangeiros entre nós, especialmente aqueles nas nossas famílias  que estão no Canadá sem estatuto.

Os nossos estrangeiros estão agora a experimentar as expetativas que acompanham o novo governo. O Ministro está a construir expetativas de mudança no processo de imigração.

Congratulo-me com a disposição do Ministro para falar sobre os trabalhadores estrangeiros e da imigração do trabalhador ilegal.

2016 é o ano da mudança ou do conflito.

Até agora, a maioria das expetativas para os trabalhadores indocumentados têm sido exageradas ou falsas. Algumas tem sido esperançosas.

Do lado positivo, o Ministro disse que voltará a permitir os filhos dependentes até 22 anos sejam incluidos nos processos de residência dos seus pais.

Por outro lado, muitos na comunidade estão enganados ao supor que o Ministro abriu as portas para os irmãos poderem pratocinar as suas familias. O Ministro apenas sinalizou que irá tornar mais fácil para os candidatos que passarem no exame de Inglês / Francês, tenham um contrato  de trabalho aprovado e estejam legais no Canadá.

No que diz respeito aos LMIA’s (contratos de trabalho), o governo disse que irá esperar até ao Outono para anunciar as novas regras dos LMIA’s. No entanto, há alguma esperança de que as regras sejam mais flexiveis para as empresas dispostas a passar por um processo mais dificil. Infelizmente os trabalhadores ilegais que receberem um LMIA não os beneficiará em nada, a não ser que deixem o Canadá com pouca esperaça de voltar.

Pessoalmente, não estou a concentra-me nos work permits (licenças de trabalho). De muitas maneiras, eles oferecem falsas esperanças para aqueles candidatos imigrantes em perspectiva que não podem passar no exame da lingua. Antes, o work permit (licença de trabalho) podia ser o caminho para o programa PNP. O estrangulamento do programa PNP oferece pouco incentivo para aqueles que falam pouco inglês para começar com um work permit (licença de trabalho).

Estou concentrado em usar as leis que exigem que o governo reveja os processos de residência daqueles trabalhadores que se tornaram economicamente estabelecidos no Canadá, apesar  da incapacidade de passar no exame da lingua ou de obter um work permit (licença de trabalho). Presentemente, o governo não quer usar essas leis.  É por isso que estamos no Tribunal Federal.

O Tribunal ordenou que o governo  até 8 de Junho de 2016, mostre porque é que se recusas a considerar as aplicações de residência permanente dos trabalhadores de construção, alimentação e técnicos-mecânicos, que não conseguem passar no exame da lingua ou que não tem work permits (licenças de trabalho). O Minsitro tem até 8 de Junho de 2016 para decidir se está do lado dos anjos.

Estamos também ajudar com o lobby da Comissão do Trabalhador Indocumentado que está a perguntar ao Ministo uma questão óbvia :  Se há espaço para os refugiados financiados pelos impostos, porque é que não há espaço para os trabalhadores que pagam impostos ?

Eu encorajo todos os membros da comunidade para  contatarem os seus representantes politicos e colocarem-lhe uma simples questão:  Se todos os Canadianos são iguais então porque é que não espaço para a minha familia ?


Esta não é a primeira vez que  temos sido desafiados para empurrar um pouco mais. Tivemos sucesso antes. Eu não vejo porque não teremos sucesso outra vez.

Richard Boraks, March 20 2016

Monday, March 14, 2016

Foreign worker rules should 

be eased for fish processing 

industry, pre-budget report says

Finance committee recommends budget address 'negative impacts' 

of program on fisheries

By Rachel Ward, CBC News Posted: Mar 13, 2016 8:14 AM AT Last Updated: Mar 13, 2016 10:24 AM AT
The fish processing sector has asked in the past for more temporary foreign workers.
The fish processing sector has asked in the past for more temporary foreign workers. (CBC)
Canada's fishing sector needs some relief from the "negative impacts of the temporary foreign worker program," according to a report sent to the federal finance minister. 
The federal government should use the upcoming budget to address the issue "in the immediate term," the House of Commons finance committee report said after countrywide consultations
The committee heard presentations from organizations across the country from a variety of sectors including agriculture, food and fisheries. It recommends a full review of the temporary foreign worker program.
One of the issues raised was the barriers preventing seafood from getting to market. 

Limits on the number of workers

The report doesn't specify what negative effects the temporary foreign worker program has had on the seafood industry, but limits on the number of workers companies could hire caused Atlantic Canadian industry professionals to raise concerns last spring. 
As recently as January, the P.E.I. Fishermen's Association asked for those limits to be loosened ahead of this spring lobster season in order to have enough staff.
In Caribou, N.S., fish processing plant owner Paul Logan said he'd like to be able to hire workers for a longer period, perhaps three to four years at a time.
"There's not enough people in the fish community, it's so seasonal," he said.

'Good' and 'beneficial'

Logan owns North Nova Seafoods, which was told last year it could hire fewer than 50 temporary foreign workers for its fish processing plant, after normally hiring closer to 70. That limitation was later relaxed, he said.
"It's a good program and beneficial to my community," Logan said.
"It enables us to hire the local people...and helps to bring in a bigger volume of fish because we have a steady workforce."
He said he normally hires around 75 local employees each year.
Some of the temporary foreign workers hired from Thailand and Mexico have married and stayed in Pictou County permanently, he said. 
"They're good in the community."
hi-pangnirtung-fish-plant-workers
As recently as January, P.E.I. Fishermen's Association asked for limits on temporary foreign workers be lifted.

'Support and employ' locals 

In southwestern Nova Scotia on Cape Sable Island, lobster buyer and seller Erica Smith said she has no trouble finding local employees for her smaller business of up to 20 full-time seasonal employees. 
"Since Alberta's been having its problems with the oil industry, a lot of people are moving back to Nova Scotia," she said.
She said she might consider using the temporary foreign worker program if her company decides in the future to expand into lobster processing.
"There are people out there that do want jobs and there doesn't seem to be enough jobs to support the local economy as it is," Smith said.
"I consider that giving back to my community."

Newfoundland expert weighs in

Memorial University fisheries school director Carey Bonnell presented to the finance committee to advocate for government support to increase "innovation, competitiveness and overall market development" of the seafood industry. 
"Things like support for temporary foreign workers are tools in the tool kit," Bonnell told the committee.
"Whether it's a long-term solution or a medium-term solution, you could debate...but if you don't have the labour to produce the product to sell to the global community, then we have a major issue on our hands."
The Source:http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/nova-scotia/temporary-foreign-worker-seafood-fishery-1.3488877
Comment:
"WHERE HAVE ALL OUR REPRESENTATIVES GONE?

Members of Parliament from Atlantic Canada are pushing hard to allow legal foreign fish plant workers. 

Meanwhile, when it comes to our 400,000 illegal undocumented workers, the GTA’s federal representatives are hiding.

Follow the money. "
Richard Boraks, March 14 2016

Justin Trudeau’s Italian problem

THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chris Young
THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chris Young
More from Michael Harris available here.
Nothing can ruin a politician’s day quite like a secret tape recording.
On December 5, 2015, rookie Liberal MP Francesco Sorbara visited the home of constituents in his Vaughan-Woodbridge riding after receiving an email that knocked him “out of his chair”.
The email was from Simone Barbieri, a PhD candidate at York University, who has interrupted her post-graduate studies to research the plight of her parents, Gino and Phyllis.
The Barbieris bought a house in Vaughan eighteen years ago, thinking that it was built on a ‘meadow’. They now claim that their home and a lot of others were erected on a former dump site that was not properly remediated by developers before construction began.
The tone of the email, which Sorbara received on November 30, 2015 at 2:31 p.m., shocked the newly minted MP. After all, he had just pulled off one of the major upsets of Election 2015 by defeating Tory cabinet minister Julian Fantino. Barbieri was not writing to offer her congratulations, but rather to accuse Sorbara of breaking a promise to her mother.
“Since you have been elected, you have not made it a priority to keep your word and (the) promise you made to my mother … So Francesco, thank you for starting out on the common foot of not supporting the residents when they need it most. It look (sic) like you seem to be fitting in quit (sic) well with the rest,” she wrote.
(The latter comment refers to visits to the Barbieri home by Ontario’s Transportation Minister Steven Del Duca, accompanied by the Ontario government’s environmental director, and also from Ward 2 Vaughan City Councillor Tony Carella. In the opinion of the Barbieris, neither politician did anything for them after being briefed on the situation.)
Sorbara had promised to visit the Barbieris to learn more about their claim that their home should never have been built on a site allegedly off-gassing lead, methane and barium. Simone Barbieri also believes that the medical problem she has developed, Crohn’s Disease, could very well have been caused by environmental factors in the sub-division. The Barbieris have been crusading for years to get the province and the municipality of Vaughan to investigate their claims — so far without success.
Even though there was no federal jurisdiction in the matter, Sorbara kept his promise and visited the Barbieris’ home. For one hour, forty-one minutes and twenty seconds he listened to a story of forged reports, dismissiveness from Queen’s Park and the city of Vaughan, negligence on the part of developers, and even of an alleged attempt at a bribe by a local developer to shut down Simone Barbieri’s research — none of which has been proven.
“I went into their home knowing nothing of their situation,” MP Sorbara told iPolitics. “I went there with the best of intentions to give them what support I could. That’s why I got into politics — to help people in any way I could.”
That instinct comes naturally to the MP whose mother worked in a fishplant in British Columbia, where he grew up. Sorbara himself started out in a pulp mill and ended up as a Wall Street banker before entering politics. He moved to Vaughan in the mid-nineties.
What Sorbara did not know on that December day in Vaughan is that a tape was running that captured his every word. The MP advised the Barbieris not to be intimidated by anyone and not to make their crusade personal against individuals. He also advised them to be well prepared for their upcoming meeting with Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne with a concise, factual presentation of their situation.
(The premier’s office has refuted the claim, insisting that no meeting of the sort ever took place, or was scheduled, with the premier or her principal secretary, Andrew Bevan.)
open quote 761b1b‘No Italians in the cabinet … Only one Italian makes principal secretary,’ said MP Sorbara. ‘So out of 55 appointments (cabinet and principal secretaries) only one Italian. We are totally under-represented. Totally getting squashed out.’
After offering his advice, as well as money for future Freedom of Information requests, Sorbara unburdened himself of some of his own frustrations with the new government of which he was a part. Representing the most ‘Italian’ riding in Canada, his remarks were not surprising.
“I’m an emotional guy so I am in Ottawa. No Italians in the cabinet … Only one Italian makes principal secretary. So out of 55 appointments (cabinet and principal secretaries) only one Italian. We are totally under-represented. Totally getting squashed out. Simone, I got to hold my emotions back …”
Sorbara had another emotional moment at Pearson Airport on December 4, 2015, which he also recounted to the Barbieris.
“I was at the airport yesterday and Minister MaryAnn Mihychuk (Employment, Workforce and Labour) was there. A whole bunch of us. Everybody was there on the 8:30 flight last night. And I brought the minister back for the Carpenters Union … the Carpenters Union is in our riding, you’ve got to show respect. You’ve got to show the union respect. They helped us out in the election. We were there, and the minister said, ‘I saw these guys, I felt like I was in a Mafia movie.’ She said it jokingly.”
(iPolitics contacted Minister Mihychuk’s office in writing for her reaction. Her director of communications, John M. OLeary, requested a phone number to further discuss the matter. He did not make further contact.)
Sorbara also apparently expressed misgivings about his caucus mate, and the Liberal chair of the Environment Committee, Deb Shulte.
“She doesn’t like Italians,” he said on the tape, in an answer to a comment from Tony Barbieri, the son of the Barbieris.
(iPolitics contacted MP Shulte, who said: “Anyone who knows me knows some of my best friends are Italian and I chose to raise my family in Vaughan because of the strong family values of the Italian community living there … The person making these comments obviously does not know me well.”)
Shulte later wrote to add that the whole thing was a misunderstanding and that she and Francesco Sorbara would continue to work together.
iPolitics sat down with Francesco Sorbara in Toronto for his reaction to his comments on the Barbieri tape. Regarding his comment about Italians being “totally squashed out” of the senior ranks of the Trudeau government, Sorbara said that “Italians will continue to make their contributions whether as members of cabinet, parliamentary secretaries or ordinary MPs.”
As for Minister Mihychuk’s “mafia” remark, the rookie MP stressed that she was joking, though he added he didn’t appreciate the insensitivity. Finally, he flatly admitted that the claim that Deb Shulte didn’t like Italians was not true and was his “mistake.”
“I confused her unhappiness with a campaign loss in Vaughan municipal politics with not liking Italians. I was wrong.”
Despite backing away from his secretly taped comments, Sorbara’s initial view that Italian Canadians are sorely under-represented in the Trudeau inner circle is only unique by virtue of the fact that his name is attached to it. Writing in his blog, TV Ontario host Steve Paikin quoted anonymous Italian Liberals who were not pleased with being shut out of the cabinet for the first time in 35 years.
Paikin reported that the Italian community was “more than a little miffed” about Trudeau’s apparent cold shoulder. Pakin quoted one of them as saying: “Four Sikhs and no Italians. I don’t know about that.”
In Paul Martin’s era there were seven ministers of Italian descent — Albina Guarenieri, Tony Valeri, Joe Volpe, Joe Fontana, Tony Ianno, Judy Sgro and Joe Comuzzi. And it’s not as if Justin Trudeau had a shortage of Italian-descent candidates for his “perfect” cabinet: Eleven MPs of Italian heritage were elected in 2015, including Judy Sgro, Joe Peschisolido, Marco Mendocini, Anthony Rota, Mike Bossio, Angela Iacono, David Lametti, Nicolo Di Lorio — and Francesco Sorbara.
Writing in the Globe and Mail, Lysianne Gagnon also challenged Trudeau on his claim that he had cobbled together a cabinet that perfectly reflected Canada, citing the fact that there were no Italian, Chinese or black representatives in his inner circle.
She also noted that Sikhs, who represent 1.4 per cent of the population, got four cabinet posts — a reward, perhaps, for the Sikh community electing 16 Sikh MPs. The Italian community, which represents approximately 4.5 per cent of the population, elected 11 MPs and received no cabinet seats.
Contacted by iPolitics this week, Fantino had this to say: “While the Liberals have taken the Canadian-Italian community for granted, I hope the prime minister begins to recognize the important role the Italian diaspora has contributed to the prosperity, security and well being of our country.”
One of the pioneers of Italian-Canadian participation in federal politics was philosophical about the lack of representation in the Trudeau cabinet. Former Liberal cabinet minister Joe Volpe, now the publisher of the Italian language Corriere Canadese newspaper in Toronto, told iPolitics he would rather see Italians be proactive about getting into the cabinet instead of grousing about not being included.
“Of course I would rather we had been represented. I was never consulted on that decision. Everybody needs to be validated and the Italian contribution to the Liberal party should be reflected in the government. But in identity politics, it’s like John Turner said: ‘You gotta step up to the plate and swing or shut up.’ We have to let people know who we are. Eleven elected and no one made it this time, so here at Corriere we’re going to help them tell the country who they are.”
As for Francesco Sorbara’s secretly taped comments, Volpe was succinct. “It was a rookie mistake. The important thing is that he is a good person and this shouldn’t cripple him for life.”
— With files from Kirsten Smith
Michael Harris is a writer, journalist, and documentary filmmaker. He was awarded a Doctor of Laws for his “unceasing pursuit of justice for the less fortunate among us.” His nine books include Justice Denied, Unholy Orders, Rare ambition, Lament for an Ocean, and Con Game. His work has sparked four commissions of inquiry, and three of his books have been made into movies. His new book on the Harper majority government, Party of One, is a number one best-seller and has been shortlisted for the Governor-General’s Literary Award for English-language non-fiction.
Readers can reach the author at michaelharris@ipolitics.ca. Click here to view other columns by Michael Harris.
The views, opinions and positions expressed by all iPolitics columnists and contributors are the author’s alone. They do not inherently or expressly reflect the views, opinions and/or positions of iPolitics.
The Source:http://ipolitics.ca/2016/03/10/justin-trudeaus-italian-problem/
Comment:
"Resign

Human Recourses Minister MaryAnn Mihychuk has ruled herself out as a  person qualified  to deal with the underlying issues of Ontario’s undocumented trades worker issue.

Her characterization of the Carpenters Union as “mafia” has rendered her incapable of sitting down at the table with any trades sector Ontarian, whether employer, worker, union or lawyer.  

No Torontonian can comfortably sit down with Ms. Mihychuk and expect a dispassionate hearing. She comes to the table with prejudices that may trump a rational discussion of the issues.

An apology won’t cut it. Having insulted the unions, she can be counted on to bend over backwards to seek their political forgiveness. We don’t need policy based on self-serving “mea culpas”.

Ms. Mihychuk is from the same bolt as those insecure third generation bigots who choose to forget that their grandparents would punch in the face anyone who referred to their little May Ann  as a  “bohonk”.

Then there is the bigger picture .Does anyone believe that Ms. Mihychuk would be in cabinet today if she had characterized 4 of her Sikh cabinet colleagues as “rag heads”. So the bigger question is whether government policy on such matters as immigration quotas or undocumented workers  are determined by those whose sense of shared values continues  to  exclude Toronto.

Make no mistake… four years from now, Ms. Mihychuk’s comments may be referred to as the first crack in the fall of this government."

Richard Boraks, March 14 2016

Wednesday, March 9, 2016

A step backwards

Maybe I’m missing something, but the Immigration Minister’s plan for 2016 is a significant step backwards for Ontario’s trades employers and their taxpaying undocumented workers.  

At first glance, the 2016 Immigration plan report guarantees significant growth of Ontario’s booming undocumented worker sector. Fraudulent marriages should also see significant increase along with tax payer sponsored refugees.  

·        The Minister is reducing economic immigrants by 20,000 and increasing refugees by 30,000.

·        Long term illegals applying under the Humanitarian quota were just cut by 1,500.

·        There was absolutely no mention of the Federal Skilled Trades Program.

·        There was no absolutely no mention of undocumented workers



It looks as if the Liberals want to play with fire in the GTHA.  

Richard Boraks, March 9 2016

Tuesday, March 8, 2016

National Opinion Centre
Empty rhetoric, bombast, crude language rude behaviour has been the staple of the early stages of the American Presidential debates – Republican version. If you want to be President of the world’s richest, most powerful country, “you have to show your stuff”.
A circus sideshow developed where a ruthless, scapegoating, mean-spirited “I’m angry and I‘m not going to take it anymore” approach generated by one of the world’s richest, most privileged buffoons became the order of the day.
A frontier justice mentality – “hang them high; send them back” – is drowning more seasoned, reasonable voices. Logic, data-based policy, takes second place to visceral responses. Illogic rules. Distraction and distortion dominate.
Mexico, Mexicans and Latinos have become the North American surrogates for the “Syrian-Kurdish Invasion” of Europe. The choice of language is deliberate. It evokes mass movements of illegal, rapacious hordes. Just the right image to shape paranoid views on what has become a world-wide issue, and the “illegalities” that surround it.
The Europeans held a summit yesterday to address the migration/refugee issue. It is tied to human smuggling (modern day slavery), drug distribution, gun running and military operations. Several countries – Italy, France, England and the USA – already have a naval presence in the Mediterranean in a monitoring, search and rescue and “deterrent capacity. Italy, for example, Assumed the cost of rescuing and housing 140,000 “illegals” from the waters of the Mediterranean in an 18-month period, 2014-2015.
In North America, the Issue of “illegal immigration” has been usurped by the dynamics of what passes for debate on demographic policy among Republicans, save Governor Kasich’s last voice of reason. Just how many “illegal immigrants” are there and what is their cost to us?
The numbers thrown about challenge consistency and methodology. A mere eight years ago, the operative figure was 30 million – 9% of the population of the USA., and roughly the equivalent of the population of Canada at the time. Today that number has been reduced to approximately 12 million by two credible organizations. That is just under the total population of Ontario. A “send them back” strategy in the USA would involve identifying, locating, incarcerating and forcibly transporting that many people.
A former Ambassador of Mexico to the USA, using the 30 million figure, posited a $120 billion USD cost for that exercise: $4, 000 USD per capita, $6,000 CDN at today’s exchange rate. He has re-aligned himself with the more current 12 million number since first calculating the cost, but without changing the per capita estimate. In other words, pursuing this public policy objective will cost $72 billion CDN.
Add to that total the loss to GDP that this “ethnic cleansing” will generate, plus the cost of erecting a wall to keep others out and one gets a better sense of the cost analysis associated with these policy musings. The benefits? Not that clear.
Citizenship and Immigration Canada is about to present its Plan and the associated rationale to parliament on Wednesday. Illegal immigration/immigrants will probably feature significantly in that plan.
Is it a problem? How large is the number? No-one knows for sure. Typically, in the absence of definitive empirical data, Canadian institution engage in the default position: “10% of the American numbers“. A lazy policy-maker’s summary will have us believe that there are 1.2 million “illegals” (mostly Visa overstays) with about 480,000 of them in Ontario alone.
That latter number is close to what the City of Toronto indicated in a report last year: 200, 000 in the 416 area code and 100,000 in the adjacent 905 area code. The GTA is home to approximately one half of the population of Ontario.
Do we derive costs on the same pro-rated basis from American assessments? If so, some sort of removal exercise will carry at least a $7.2 billion outlay. Whether this is a preferred option is for decision makers to assess and sell or abandon.
What is inevitable is the conclusion that no sound demographic and economic policy can emerge without addressing this issue, sooner rather than later. We do not live in a vacuum. Europeans and Americans are responding to current and potentially uncontrollable migratory trends. They are not excluding military options.
I doubt Canadians have an appetite to be drawn into that vortex. Our “illegals” are here and integrated. What is the cost of “regularizing” their status instead?
The Source:http://www.nationalnewswatch.com/2016/03/08/we-need-a-solution-for-the-illegal-immigrants/#.Vt7xZ_mLTIW

Comment:
Wednesday March 9, 2016

The word is that tomorrow, Canada‘s government will actually start talking openly about illegal workers.

This would be most important."
Richard Boraks, March 8 2016 

Wednesday, March 2, 2016

Crisis?

What crisis?

The numbers in Europe

European Union population = 508, 191, 116 (2015 estimate)

Number of refugees and illegal workers in Europe = assume 2 million

For every 250 Europeans there is one refugee or illegal worker

The number in Ontario

Ontario population = 13,550,900 (2015 estimate)

Number of illegal workers in Ontario =assume   400,000

For every 32 Ontarians there is one illegal worker

The comparison

On a per capita basis Ontario has 700% more problematic foreigners


So why are we aghast at the Euro mess? 

Reason #1: Because our Euro friends have a silly habit of dealing with issues. We simply say that we have no illegals. The logic is based on our governments, unions and employers taking the collective position that since our illegals are illegal they do not exist. If they do not exist then there is no problem. Issue resolved.

Reason #2: Our Euro friends pay out tax dollars to subsidize their foreign invasion. Our illegals subsidize our tax payers.    

Reason #3: Our Euro friends worry about Muslims who are strangers. Our illegals are Christians, the majority of whom have Canadian family 

Reason #4: The foreigners in Europe were uninvited. Our illegals were mostly invited. 

Conclusion

The Euro folks have a crisis because they have the statistics indicating   that they are being swamped and exploited by strangers.

We do not have a crisis because we are doing a fine job exploiting our brothers and their children, none of whom actually exist.

Richard Boraks, March 2 2016