Ontario Government
Launches Immigration Website
NorthernLife.ca - Greater Sudbury on the Web
Greater Sudbury News Wednesday, March 08, 2006 14:34
(article sent courtesy of Eddie Fernandes)
The provincial government has launched a new immigration
website, www.ontarioimmigration.ca, to welcome newcomers
and provide them with information needed to start new
lives in Ontario.
The website features information about places to live,
work and study, as well as details on how to start new
businesses or practice in a trade or profession.
Immigrants can also download important forms such as
immigration and driver's license applications on the
site.
"The immigration website is a great way for newcomers to
learn more about our city, our schools and our services
before and after they arrive," Greater Sudbury Mayor
Dave Courtemanche said in a written statement.
"I am delighted that Sudbury is one of the first cities
showcased on the site."
According to the government of Ontario, about 125,000
newcomers arrive in the province each year - more than
half of all immigrants coming to Canada.
Currently, immigration accounts for an estimated 70
percent of Ontario's net labour force growth, and will
account for all of the province's net labour force
growth within the next six years.
Many skilled immigrants aren't staying .
See also www.skillsinternational.ca.
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1 In 6 Males Leaves Canada In First Year
Toronto Star March 2, 2006
Nicholas Keung, Immigration/Diversity Reporter
One in six male immigrants
leaves Canada for better opportunities elsewhere within
the first year of arrival, and those most likely to
emigrate are the cream of the crop: businessmen and
skilled workers.
Those findings are part of a Statistics Canada report
released yesterday, the first national study to get a
firm handle on the extent of out-migration and "brain
drain" among the country's new arrivals. Anecdotal
evidence for several years has suggested immigrants are
leaving in droves because they can't land suitable jobs
in Canada.
Experts say the findings highlight the need for an
integrated approach that focuses not only on selecting
the right immigrants but also on keeping them by
matching them with suitable opportunities.
"The people who are leaving the country are true
migrants. They move by choice for pure economic
reasons," said Jean Lock Kunz, associate project
director of Policy Research Initiative, an Ottawa-based
think-tank.
"In our global economy, there is a greater movement of
people and businesses. We are going to see more and more
people moving in and out. Every country will be
competing for skilled workers. The key to keep them here
is to match them up with the needs of the labour market,
so they have a reason to stay."
Basing their findings on landing records, census data
and income tax files over the past two decades,
researchers found one-third of male immigrants aged 25
to 45 at the time they arrived in Canada left within 20
years. More than half of those who left did so within
the first year.
The study's subject group amounts to about 50,000
newcomers a year, said report co-author Abdurrahman
Aydemir. Of those, 17,000 immigrant men in that age
range will end up leaving Canada eventually.
The most mobile and sought-after group of working-age
immigrant men — those who arrive via the business
investment and skilled-worker categories — are leaving
at an even higher rate: 40 per cent depart within 10
years.
Interestingly, immigrants fluent in both French and
English tend to stay for a shorter period than those who
aren't.
Male migrants from Hong Kong and the United States were
the most likely to leave Canada, followed (in order) by
those from South America, Central America, the Middle
East, and Oceania and Australia.
"In the increasingly global labour market, it may be
more appropriate to treat international migration more
like internal migration. Individuals may move around
from place to place for job-related or other reasons
several times in a lifetime," Aydemir noted in the
49-page report.
The findings don't surprise sociologist Jeffrey Reitz,
chair of the University of Toronto's Munk Centre for
International Studies.
"It is no secret among those in the field that some
people come to Canada with the intention of returning
home. The idea that used to exist was that the world
consisted of a lot of highly educated people who wanted
to come here, and Canada got to pick and choose — but
that's something of a myth," he noted.
"When it comes to immigration, we are in a very
competitive market. We have to recruit them and make
sure they stay."
University of Western Ontario economics professor Chris
Robinson, who co-authored the report, said the study
underlines the fact that an international move isn't
necessarily a permanent one any more.
"It's a very competitive market for immigrants, and it's
going to be even more competitive in the future with the
international mobility being so fluid," he explained.
"We have to figure out how to keep them. People used to
say America's a land of opportunity — they would come
and never go. The fact is, they do."
A key factor pushing newcomers out of the country is the
state of the local economy, Robinson said. Immigrant
retention rates in the recession years of 1981 and 1991
were lower (at 80.9 per cent and 72.6 per cent
respectively) than in the boom years of 1986 and 1996
(at 90.2 per cent and 76.3 per cent).
Nikhat Rasheed, co-ordinator of the Policy Roundtable
Mobilizing Professionals and Trades, a national advocacy
group for foreign-trained professionals, said a big
frustration is getting Canadian employers to recognize
overseas credentials.
Kunz downplays the notion that the immigrants who stay
behind might not be those Canada most wants and would
unnecessarily burden the settlement system.
(People who arrive through family reunification have a
30 per cent departure rate, while refugees have the
lowest at 20 per cent.)
The bottom line, Kunz said, is newcomers need to feel
welcomed in Canada and have the ability to get
established here.
According to the study, married immigrants stay about 25
per cent longer than singles, and are 40 per cent more
likely to stay than those widowed, divorced or
separated.
One way to keep newcomers here, U of T's Reitz suggests,
is for Canada to carefully balance immigrant numbers
between the family and business/skilled worker
categories.
"People stay where their families are," he noted
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