International students to plug critical labour shortages

By Kaitlyn Smith
New Canadian Media

Immigration Minister Sean Fraser has temporarily removed the 20-hour weekly work limit on study permits for international students as part of efforts to address widespread job vacancies across the Canadian economy.

The move was immediately welcomed by the Migrant Students United (MSU) and Migrant Workers Alliance for Change (MWAC).

“Removing the limit on hours of work while studying gives migrant student workers the power to protect themselves from exploitation, abuse and mistreatment at work,” MSU-MWAC organizer Sarom Rho said in a press release.

The alliance has campaigned for the work limit’s removal since 2019 when an international student was deported for working more than allowed while class was in session. In response, over 52,000 migrant students signed a petition to delay the student’s deportation, organized phone calls, met with government officials and protested for the removal of the 20-hour work limit.

The IRCC’s announcement will take effect from November 15,  2022 to December 31, 2023. International students currently authorized to work in Canada or who submitted a study permit application by today will be allowed to work full-time hours off campus while class is in session.

Any potential study permit applicants who apply after today’s deadline will still be subject to the 20-hour work limit.

“These exclusions further entrench a tiered system, where some migrant student workers have fewer rights than others allowing employers to continue to exploit those with less power to speak up,” Rho said.

The number of international college students enrolments more than doubled between 2015 to 2021, according to Statistics Canada. Over 600, 000 international students held study permits in 2021, more than half of whom were enrolled in post-secondary education at colleges or universities across the country.

In another Statistics Canada report, international students paid five times more in tuition fees for full-time undergraduate studies than their Canadian counterparts in the 2021-2022 academic year.

The average international student tuition fees for full-time undergraduate international students is $33, 623 for the same academic year, while Canadians pay an average of $6, 693.

In the 2021-2022 academic session, international students also saw a 4.9 percent increase in fees from the previous year, while Canadian students saw an average increase of 1.7 percent.

“Increasingly, postsecondary institutions have relied on income from international students as part of their revenue stream,” the report from last year said.

Minister Fraser also announced a pilot program to automate the approval of applications to extend study permits.

By the end of August this year, the IRCC had processed 452, 000 study permit extension requests – an 81 percent increase from 2021 – approving 96 percent of applications, he said. The pilot program will help automate the approval of these extension requests, and hopefully, streamline this arduous process for international students.

In March, Statistics Canada released a report outlining the potential for international students to fill the historic labour shortage as the nation’s economy recovers from the COVID-19 pandemic.

“International students provided a growing source of labour for the Canadian market that extended beyond their period of study,” the report said, referencing the Post-Graduation Work Permit (PGWP) Program as an opportunity for international students to gain work experience in their field in Canada and fill employment vacancies.

Advocates want to keep the focus away from how immigrant labour can breathe life into Canada’s economy, and on increasing employment autonomy by removing the 20-hour work limit gives international students.

“Today’s announcement isn’t about labour shortage,” Rho said. “It’s about labour mobility and rights. It’s a direct result of years of tireless organizing by current and former international students.”

In their press release, MWAC says they will continue to “take action” on Oct. 16 at the offices of Cabinet Ministers, with demands to regularize undocumented residents and permanent resident status for all “without delay and exclusion.”

 

Quick facts

• Most post-secondary international students are allowed to work on and/or off campus, with their authorization to work printed directly on their study permit. In the past, nearly half of the post-secondary international students in Canada reported earning income during their studies.

• Prior to the announcement, any student with the authorization to work off-campus was permitted to work a maximum of 20 hours per week while class is in session, as well as full-time during scheduled breaks. Students eligible to work on campus are not subject to a cap on hours for on-campus work.

• From January 1, 2022, to the end of August 2022, more than 452,000 study permit applications have been processed. During the same period in 2021, which was a record year, 367,000 applications were processed. This represents an increase of 23%.

• IRCC processed nearly 119,000 study permit extension applications in 2021, with an approval rate of 97%. From January 1, 2022, to the end of August 2022, more than 135,000 were processed, with an approval rate of 96%.

• Applications being considered as part of the pilot to automate study permit extensions will need to meet certain criteria in order to be automated. Applications that fall outside of the criteria will be manually reviewed by officers. The automated process will not refuse applications or recommend refusals. Any decision to refuse an application will continue

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