CIMM - Parliamentary Context - Dec 2, 2020

CIMM Ministerial Appearance on Staffing Levels and Processing Capacity

Background and Logistics

The Standing Committee on Citizenship and Immigration (CIMM) invited Minister and officials to appear at committee on December 2, 2020 from 3:30pm to 5:30pm to discuss the following motion adopted as put forth by NDP MP Jenny Kwan:

“that the Committee invite the Minister of Immigration, Refugee and Citizenship and department officials for 2 hours to provide a briefing to committee members on the impact of the pandemic on Immigration, Refugee and Citizenship staffing levels and the ability to process all immigration and refugee streams locally and abroad.”

The appearance will take place via Zoom videoconference. The Minister will appear for the first hour to provide five-minute remarks and respond to questions, and will be accompanied by IRCC officials, who will stay for the second hour to continue with questions. No opening remarks are required for the second hour. As established by the Committee, rounds of questioning will proceed as follows:

Environmental Analysis

With the recent appearances at the Special Committee on Canada-China Relations (CACN) on the situation in Hong Kong, CIMM appearance on Main Estimates and Supplementary Estimates B, as well as the ongoing CIMM study on the impacts of the pandemic, lines of questioning for this appearance may be broader than staffing levels and processing capacity. There has also been an increase of government scrutiny. Recent interventions and the general interest of parliamentarians include:

Issues Related to Staffing/Processing

  • Short and long term effects of the pandemic on pre-existing immigration issues
  • Concrete solutions to mitigate impacts and measures to prevent future recurrences
  • Economic growth and recovery for all communities (urban and rural)
  • Modernization and technologies enabling future growth in operations
  • Resumption of immigration services, including processing levels, addressing backlog, and capacity of offices domestically and abroad

Other Top Departmental Issues

  • Family reunification including compassionate grounds, spousal sponsorship dual intent and Parents and Grandparents lottery system
  • Pathways to PR for low-skilled workers, refugee claimants, and international students
  • Expired PR, including the issuance of COPR letters
  • Domestic security, admissibility and foreign interference/intimidation
  • Hong Kong special measures and pathways
  • Achieving Immigration Levels
  • Expired documentation, including work permits
  • International students work permit renewal and graduate work experience conditions
  • Travel exemptions and border restrictions

All parties are currently vocal on the impact of the pandemic on all processes and streams of immigration, and critical of government processes and policies, with a particular focus on family reunification by all opposition parties. Recently, spousal sponsorship processing and dual intent have been front of mind as members have highlighted barriers faced by applicants.

The situation in China and Hong Kong has equally been at front of mind for all parties, including the safety of Canadians abroad. Parties have recently questioned the ability to achieve numbers outlined in the recently tabled 2021–2023 Multi-Year Levels Plan given recent restrictions in face of the pandemic.

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