Mémoire à l intention de la Commission sur l avenir de l agriculture et l agro-alimentaire québécois (CAAQ) Submission to the CAAQ

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Mémoire à l intention de la Commission sur l avenir de l agriculture et l agro-alimentaire québécois (CAAQ) Submission to the CAAQ"

Transcription

1 Mémoire à l intention de la Commission sur l avenir de l agriculture et l agro-alimentaire québécois (CAAQ) Submission to the CAAQ Name: Karen Rothschild Address: 393 Haut de la Chute, Rigaud, Qc. J0P 1P jumentgrise@gmail.com This is a personal submission, although its author is a citizen member of the Union paysanne with a special responsibility for work in conjunction with the Via Campesina farmer and peasant coalition. I should like to begin by thanking the Commission for this opportunity to contribute to its consultation. I would also like to explain that my text is based on primary and secondary sources and on conversations with persons working in support of immigrant seasonal agricultural workers in Québec and Canada; I have not myself lived or worked on a farm employing these workers. Migrant agricultural workers in Québec. The structure of the seasonal workers programme in Québec: Québec is one of the nine Canadian provinces taking part in the Seasonal Agricultural Workers Programme (SAWP/PTAS) and in the programme for Guatemalan migrant workers sponsored by the International Migration Organization (OIM) of the United Nations. This year, approximately 4,000 seasonal immigrant workers are employed on approximately 350 Québec farms. These are mainly large farms, some of which employ as many as fifty people, and the majority of them are engaged in fruit and vegetable and greenhouse production, including flowers and seedling trees; a few are still engaged in tobacco production. Under the terms of their respective programmes, Mexican workers come to Canada for periods ranging from six weeks to up to eight months, and Guatemalans, who work mainly in greenhouses and as fruit and vegetable packers, may remain for as long as eleven and a half months. The Mexican programme is coordinated by Human Resources and Social Development Canada (HRSDC) and by the Mexican government, which is represented in Québec by the Consulate in Montréal. The Guatemalan programme, also coordinated by HRSDC, is administered in Guatemala by the International Migration Organization, although the Guatemalan Consulate in Montréal plays a similar role to that of the Mexican Consulate. Although HRSDC has a full-time representative in Montréal who oversees the programmes, it is the non-profit agency FERME that administers the

2 relations between the employing farms and their workers, processing employer applications to the programme, communicating with the Mexican government, making travel arrangements for workers, etc. All employers and employees must sign a contract drawn up by HRSDC setting out the terms and conditions of employment. Workers must reside on the farms where they are employed, and employers are expected to provide acceptable housing and either meals or cooking equipment. Each season s wage rates are established on the basis of whichever is the highest: the provincial minimum wage; the prevailing provincial wage rate for the type of work; or the wage that is being paid by the employer to any Canadian employees that he may have who are doing equivalent work. (It is HRSDC that determines the prevailing wage rate; they have in the past received some criticism over their alleged failure to reveal the figures on which they base their calculations.) Workers must assume (through deductions in instalments from their salary) the full cost of their visa application and part of the cost of their air fare. (Under certain circumstances, they are required to assume the full cost of their air fare.) The foreign seasonal workers salaries are subject to the same deductions as those of Québec workers. Foreign seasonal workers are not entitled to unemployment benefits, although they may and do receive parental benefits under the federal employment insurance programme. (It should be noted that the foreign workers were never themselves informed of their eligibility for parental benefits; it was left to a community organization in Ontario to discover this entitlement and to begin to advocate on their behalf.) Those workers who return to Canada over a period of many years will, in the course of time, be entitled to receive a Canadian pension. Foreign seasonal workers are (in theory) eligible for the Québec Workers Compensation programme (CSST). They are entitled to provincial health care and are supplied with medical cards. They are also obliged to enrol in a private medical insurance plan run by the Royal Bank of Canada, which covers the cost of medication, time off from work due to illness, etc. (The employer pays the full insurance premium, which is then deducted in instalments from the worker s salary.) All housing accommodations for the workers must be inspected and approved as conforming to provincial or municipal housing standards. Mexican workers are accommodated at no charge; Guatemalan workers pay $35 per week for their housing. The functioning of the seasonal workers programme in Québec: As the foregoing outline shows, there is a very limited role for the Québec government in the present structure of the programme. Furthermore, there is no person or institution whose specific task it is to advocate for foreign seasonal agricultural workers employed in Québec. In principle, it is incumbent upon the consular representatives to fulfill this role, but in practice the consulates have a vested interest in the continuity of the programme, which is both a source of jobs and, since the workers save and send home almost all of their earnings, a source of revenue. Similarly, the responsibility of the representative of HRSDC appears to be that of ensuring the smooth functioning of the

3 programme. Although, in certain cases, the HRSDC representative may reach a negative evaluation with regard to labour relations at a particular farm, it is the foreign government that has the final say over whether or not it will continue to send workers to that farm. The lack of an official advocate for the workers is compounded by the fact that the terms of the employer-employee contract allow workers to be repatriated at any time for any sufficient reason. It is clear that so imprecise a provision should be subjected to a stringent and impartial appeal process. This is not the case. There is in fact no appeal process for a worker whose employer has decided that he should be sent back to his home country. It is particularly deplorable that workers can be, and are, repatriated in the case of illness. In general, workers are not informed of the terms of their private insurance contract or of their potential eligibility for workers compensation. For the employer, it is less troublesome and time-consuming to send an ill worker home than to fulfill the bureaucratic requirements that are necessary for the worker to obtain temporary out of work benefits from the insurance company. According to reports, consular representatives frequently suggest to ailing workers that, since they are ill and cannot work, they would be much better off returning home. In such cases, if a worker readily agrees that he would like to go home, he is considered to have left his job and is therefore obliged to pay his own return air fare. The question of CSST eligibility is even more complicated. In order to receive out of work benefits and medical treatment following a workplace accident, a worker must be in Québec. (Like any other worker, he is supposed to be available to return to work as soon as he has recovered from his injury.) However, once a seasonal worker has been in Canada for the maximum time covered by his work permit (that is to say, eight months for Mexican workers and eleven and a half months for Guatemalan workers), he loses his Canadian Immigration status as a temporary worker; he is reclassified by Canadian Immigration as a tourist, which means that he has become ineligible for CSST benefits. Moreover, it is in any case very difficult for a worker to support himself during the time period while his application is being processed by the CSST. This writer has been given some details of two cases of foreign workers who applied for CSST benefits. In one case, the worker was granted benefits. However, he returned to his country before his medical treatments were completed, following the suggestion of his Consul, who reportedly informed him that he would be eligible for free treatments in his home country. (That information turned out to be inaccurate.) In the other instance, the worker has had a fouryear struggle with Canadian and Québécois authorities, and he is expecting a final decision on his case very soon. It is only thanks to a family who have provided him with long-term physical sustenance and moral support that he has been able to persevere. In fact, the absence of an appeal process has repercussions on almost every part of the seasonal foreign workers programmes. Workers often hesitate to form a union or even to complain to their employer about any aspect of their employment. If they do so, not only do they risk losing months of work and the greater part of their travel expenses, but they

4 may also be categorized as troublemakers and thus become ineligible to continue with the programme in future years. Although the contract provides for an eight-hour day and a six-day work week, it also states that the worker may, if requested to do so by the employer, work for more than eight hours and postpone the rest day. Without an appeal process, it is easy to see that may can actually become must. It should, however, be stated that this writer has been informed that workers rarely complain of excessive work hours, as they are anxious to earn as much as possible while they are working in Québec. One thing that they do report, but hesitate to complain of, is that at times they are not given the forty hours of minimum average weekly work time called for by their contract.in general, they do not complain, because those who do so, even if they are not repatriated, risk receiving a negative recommendation from their employer. A worker who receives a negative recommendation at the end of the work season is extremely unlikely to be accepted into the programme the following year. It is easily apparent that the above observations also apply to conditions for food and lodging. For many workers, putting up with uncomfortable housing and inadequate meal provisions is preferable to risking repatriation or a negative recommendation. There are even reported cases of workers hesitating to seek medical attention because of a fear of job loss. Another problem area, separate from but not unrelated to the above considerations, is the use of pesticides. All too frequently, workers are given no training in the handling and use of pesticides, and, when required to spray, they are not given protective equipment apart from gloves. Since they do not speak or read French or English and they have received no training, they are essentially unaware of the potential dangers of the pesticides to which they may be exposed. (They do in many cases use gloves because they have seen and suffered the effects of these chemicals on their hands.) And, like many Québec and Canadian farmers, they may find it difficult to envisage the negative effects on their health that could occur in ten or fifteen years time. It is also reported that there are occasions when the prescribed delays between spraying and the resumption of field work in the sprayed area are not respected by the employers. This means that it is not only the workers who are actually carrying out the task of spraying who are exposed to the pesticides. It goes without saying that this deplorable situation is linked to the even larger problem of pesticide use in Québec and to the very inadequate policies of the government with regard to support for organic farmers and for farmers who are in transition to organic methods. It can fairly be concluded that although foreign seasonal agricultural workers are entitled in theory to Québec and Canadian labour and social standards, in practice they become a group apart. They are certainly not slaves, for they can go home if they wish. But as long as they are in Canada, they do not have the freedoms enjoyed by Canadian workers. In fact, there is even an effort on the part of employers to define their own contractual responsibility of ensuring that workers receive necessary medical attention as a prohibition for the workers themselves to exercise any choice as to which doctor to consult or as to who will accompany them on a medical visit. Similarly, employers are trying to define the Canadian Immigration requirement that workers must reside with

5 their employers as an absolute prohibition against a worker s leaving the farm property overnight. Furthermore, despite the fact that all agricultural workers in Québec have a legal right to join a union, the agency FERME has even gone so far as to recommend that workers be ordered not to associate with members or employees of the United Food and Commercial Workers Union. There are also reports that, upon their arrival at the farm, workers are asked to sign a paper requesting their employer to take into his keeping their personal documents: passport, medical card, etc. At this time, the Guatemalan workers on one Québec farm are now union members. This is due to the successful organizing efforts of the farm s Québécois workers, who have insisted that all the workers be included in the union. Mexican workers on three other farms have taken the risk of embarking on the process of union organization. They have faced lengthy delays due to legal efforts on the part of the employers to prevent the formation of a union. These Mexican workers are now awaiting the final decision of the government of Québec. The circumstances of all of the foreign workers are worsened by the fact that they are alone, without friends and family members, in a strange country. The seasonal agricultural workers programmes particularly favour married men (and in a minority of cases single mothers), who cannot, however, be accompanied to Canada by their dependents. As a result of this arrangement, Mexican families can be separated for half the year or more and Guatemalan families for almost twelve months. These separations often take place over a long time period, as some workers continue with the programme for many years. General Observations: It is important to note that such situations are by no means specific to Québec and Canada, and that international human rights bodies have attempted to respond to some of the human rights problems related to migration. The United Nations International Convention on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of their Families specifically calls for the right of appeal in cases of expulsion. Other international legal instruments are concerned with the isolation suffered by migrant workers. Indeed the very fact that migrant agricultural workers are so often the victims of human rights abuses, as is shown by the situation of the millions of Mexican and Central American farm workers in the United States and the thousands of Moroccan and Eastern European migrant harvesters in the European Union, can be considered to be a characteristic feature of modern industrial agriculture. It should be remembered that some of the very same Mexican workers who are now migrating to Canada and the United States have lost their livelihoods because of the catastrophic effects of the NAFTA on Mexican agriculture. Although it is beyond the scope of this text to enter into a discussion of these much broader issues, it should be recognized that for a number of Mexican social analysts the real solution to the problem of migrant workers must be found at home. These analysts speak of the right not to have

6 to migrate and of the right of peasants to continue to be peasants. They call for massive support for small and medium scale agriculture and for a halt to development mega-projects (such as mines and dams) that further endanger peasant agriculture. It is not my intention in submitting this text to enter into the specific problems of agriculture in Québec. Nevertheless, the situation of the foreign workers must be seen in the context of Québec agriculture as a whole specifically in the context of the concentration in the size of the largest farms and the increasing financial difficulties of smaller farms. Recommendations: A) Although there are now approximately 4,000 foreign seasonal workers who are regularly employed in Québec, the government of Québec has no real role in the organizing and administering of the seasonal agricultural workers programmes. It is therefore recommended that the Québec government, with the agreement of the Canadian, Mexican and Guatemalan governments and of the International Migration Organization, set up an office or Ombudsperson whose task will be to act as a neutral authority to oversee the programmes, and that: 1) Except in cases of extreme emergency, no repatriation or expulsion of a worker should be carried out without the specific approval of the Ombudsperson, who should function as an instance of appeal that gives special consideration to the testimony of the affected worker or workers (and, should they be unionized, the testimony of their union representatives). 2) That all negative evaluations and recommendations from the employer should be reviewed by the Ombudsperson, and that no worker should be excluded from the programme as a whole without the consent of the Ombudsperson. 3) That steps should be taken to ensure that workers are informed of their entitlements under the private insurance plan and the CSST, and that the necessary changes should be made to ensure that, when necessary, they can actually benefit from those rights. In the case of the CSST, this will mean that a new agreement must be reached with Immigration Canada to ensure that an injured worker who is receiving benefits can continue to be classified as a worker for the duration of his treatment - or in the case of a single financial compensation for an injury that has permanently incapacitated a worker, until that worker has been awarded the allotted sum of money. 4) That steps be taken to promote and protect the right of foreign workers to join unions (and in their off-work hours to associate freely with persons of their choice). 5) That workers should not be asked or expected to hand over to the employer their personal documents.

7 6) That there be periodic inspections by the competent provincial or municipal authorities of the buildings in which workers are housed. It has been pointed out, by the United Food and Commercial Workers Union and others, that the suitability of a dwelling depends partly on how many people are occupying it. It is important that the actual living conditions of the workers be assessed. Reports of such inspections should be submitted to the Ombudsperson. 7) That there be full compliance with all governmental laws and regulations, including any additional recommendations from the Ministry of Public Health, regarding the utilization of pesticides. 8) That all farms have access to the services of a competent interpreter and that this service be provided without charge for workers The Ombudsperson s office should be fully able to work in Spanish as well as French and English, (and in the case of any Guatemalan workers who speak one of Guatemala s twenty-one indigenous languages and who do not speak Spanish, the office should locate a person who is able to function as an interpreter in emergency situations). All workers should receive written and verbal information in Spanish on the role of the Ombudsperson and they should be encouraged to report to the Ombudsperson any and all problems related to compliance with items 3-8 of the above. (Indigenous language speakers from Guatemala should receive this information verbally in their own language.) B) The seasonal foreign labour force makes a very significant contribution to Québec agriculture. In recognition of this fact, the Québec government should give very serious consideration to selecting experienced (skilled) agricultural workers as landed immigrants. In practice this could mean that, after having worked in Québec for a period (necessarily interrupted since they are seasonal workers) of twenty-four months, workers would have the right, should they so wish, to apply for landed immigrant status for themselves and their immediate family members. (At a Canadian level, a similar recommendation has been made on more than one occasion by the United Food and Commercial Workers Union. It should be noted that what is being recommended is very similar to the existing Canadian arrangements for immigrant domestic workers.)

ALBERTA FEDERATION OF LABOUR

ALBERTA FEDERATION OF LABOUR ALBERTA FEDERATION OF LABOUR POLICY PAPER MAY 2003 INTRODUCTION Every year in increasing numbers, thousands of migrant agricultural workers travel from Mexico and the Caribbean to work on Canadian farms

More information

Canada s Seasonal Agricultural Worker Program Presentation by Elizabeth Ruddick Citizenship and Immigration Canada

Canada s Seasonal Agricultural Worker Program Presentation by Elizabeth Ruddick Citizenship and Immigration Canada Canada s Seasonal Agricultural Worker Program Presentation by Elizabeth Ruddick Citizenship and Immigration Canada Session III: Bilateral Approaches to Managing the Movement and Temporary Stay of Workers

More information

Protecting labour rights of temporary migrant workers

Protecting labour rights of temporary migrant workers Protecting labour rights of temporary migrant workers Lessons learned from a study of the Canadian Seasonal Agricultural Workers Program Heather Gibb The North-South Institute CSAWP facts & figures Started

More information

Occupational Health & Safety & Non-Canadian Born Workers

Occupational Health & Safety & Non-Canadian Born Workers Occupational Health & Safety & Non-Canadian Born Workers Peter MacLeod, Policy Officer Labour and Workforce Development Occupational Health and Safety Division Context: Better Regulation and the Regulatory

More information

Are You Coming To The United States Temporarily To Work Or Study?

Are You Coming To The United States Temporarily To Work Or Study? Know Your Rights Call one of the hotlines listed in this pamphlet if you need help You are receiving this pamphlet because you have applied for a nonimmigrant visa to work or study temporarily in the United

More information

Are You Coming To The United States Temporarily To Work Or Study?

Are You Coming To The United States Temporarily To Work Or Study? Are You Coming To The United States Temporarily To Work Or Study? We Are Confident That You Will Have An Interesting And Rewarding Stay. However, If You Should Encounter Any Problems, You Have Rights And

More information

Canada's Temporary Migration Program: A Model Despite Flaws

Canada's Temporary Migration Program: A Model Despite Flaws 1 of 6 19/11/2007 11:50 AM Email this article Print this article Canada's Temporary Migration Program: A Model Despite Flaws By Tanya Basok University of Windsor November 2007 Interest in temporary migration

More information

SUBMISSION TO THE UN COMMITTEE ON MIGRANT WORKERS REGARDING THE LIST OF ISSUES TO BE ADOPTED FOR MEXICO S SECOND PERIODIC REVIEW

SUBMISSION TO THE UN COMMITTEE ON MIGRANT WORKERS REGARDING THE LIST OF ISSUES TO BE ADOPTED FOR MEXICO S SECOND PERIODIC REVIEW SUBMISSION TO THE UN COMMITTEE ON MIGRANT WORKERS REGARDING THE LIST OF ISSUES TO BE ADOPTED FOR MEXICO S SECOND PERIODIC REVIEW 1. Global Workers Justice Alliance, in conjunction with the Immigrant Justice

More information

SECRETARIAT OF LABOUR AND SOCIAL WELFARE

SECRETARIAT OF LABOUR AND SOCIAL WELFARE Mexico s Seasonal Agricultural Workers Program (SAWP) } SECRETARIAT OF LABOUR AND SOCIAL WELFARE Under Secretariat of Employment and Labour Productivity March 2010 1 Mexico s SAWP Mexico-Canada Partnership

More information

TEMPORARY FOREIGN WORKER PROGRAM

TEMPORARY FOREIGN WORKER PROGRAM BCFED SUBMISSION JUNE 2016 TEMPORARY FOREIGN WORKER PROGRAM Submission to the Standing Committee on Human Resources, Skills and Social Development and the Status of Persons with Disabilities Review of

More information

THE SHIFTING GLOBAL ECONOMIC ORDER AND ITS IMPACT ON CORPORATE IMMIGRATION A CANADIAN PERSPECTIVE. Kenneth K.C. Ing

THE SHIFTING GLOBAL ECONOMIC ORDER AND ITS IMPACT ON CORPORATE IMMIGRATION A CANADIAN PERSPECTIVE. Kenneth K.C. Ing THE SHIFTING GLOBAL ECONOMIC ORDER AND ITS IMPACT ON CORPORATE IMMIGRATION A CANADIAN PERSPECTIVE by Kenneth K.C. Ing 1080-1188 West Georgia Street Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada V6E 4A2 Telephone:

More information

respect to the Committee s study of the Temporary Foreign Worker Program ( TFWP ).

respect to the Committee s study of the Temporary Foreign Worker Program ( TFWP ). Submissions respecting the Temporary Foreign Worker Program review by the Standing Committee on Human Resources, Skills and Social Development and the Status of Persons with Disabilities Juliana Dalley,

More information

1. Employment-based Immigration Programmes and Temporary Labour Migration Programmes Assessing Foreign Labour Demand... 9

1. Employment-based Immigration Programmes and Temporary Labour Migration Programmes Assessing Foreign Labour Demand... 9 Employment and Residence Permits for Migrant Workers, 2009 Content: 1. Employment-based Immigration Programmes and Temporary Labour Migration Programmes... 2 2. Assessing Foreign Labour Demand... 9 3.

More information

Temporary Foreign Worker Program

Temporary Foreign Worker Program Temporary Foreign Worker Program Prepared by: Date: Background Temporary Foreign Worker Program What We Heard The Temporary Foreign Worker (TFW) Program assists Canadian employers with filling their labour

More information

AGREEMENT ON SOCIAL SECURITY BETWEEN THE GOVERNMENT OF CANADA AND THE GOVERNMENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF CROATIA

AGREEMENT ON SOCIAL SECURITY BETWEEN THE GOVERNMENT OF CANADA AND THE GOVERNMENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF CROATIA AGREEMENT ON SOCIAL SECURITY BETWEEN THE GOVERNMENT OF CANADA AND THE GOVERNMENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF CROATIA THE GOVERNMENT OF CANADA AND THE GOVERNMENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF CROATIA, hereinafter referred

More information

The Status of Migrant Farm Workers in Canada, 2004

The Status of Migrant Farm Workers in Canada, 2004 UFCW Canada National Report on The Status of Migrant Farm Workers in Canada, 2004 Presented to: The Right Honourable Paul Martin Prime Minister The Honourable Lucienne Robillard Minister of Human Resources

More information

Report: Niagara Forum on Migrant Worker Issues. Brock University - 3 December 2017

Report: Niagara Forum on Migrant Worker Issues. Brock University - 3 December 2017 Report: Niagara Forum on Migrant Worker Issues Brock University - 3 December 2017 Niagara forum on migrant worker issues 2 Table of Contents Introduction... 2 Meeting objectives and list of workshops and

More information

Aliens Act. Based on the rights and freedoms arising from the Constitution of the Republic of Estonia,

Aliens Act. Based on the rights and freedoms arising from the Constitution of the Republic of Estonia, Aliens Act Passed 8 July 1993 (RT 1 I 1999, 44, 637; consolidated text RT I 2004, 58, 410), entered into force 12 July 1993, amended by the following Acts: 23.11.2005 entered into force 01.01.2006 - RT

More information

Hiring and Retaining Foreign Workers. Information for employers considering hiring temporary foreign workers

Hiring and Retaining Foreign Workers. Information for employers considering hiring temporary foreign workers Hiring and Retaining Foreign Workers Information for employers considering hiring temporary foreign workers 2 Meeting your labour needs Some Alberta companies employ workers from outside the province and

More information

Consular Staff and their Role in Protecting the Rights of Migrant Workers

Consular Staff and their Role in Protecting the Rights of Migrant Workers Consular Staff and their Role in Protecting the Rights of Migrant Workers Consular staff, in accordance with the international conventions that govern their functions, have a vital role in protecting the

More information

CONFLICT PALM OIL PEPSICO S

CONFLICT PALM OIL PEPSICO S THE HUMAN COST CONFLICT PALM OIL : PEPSICO S HIDDEN LINK TO WORKER EXPLOITATION IN INDONESIA EXECUTIVE SUMMARY The destruction of rainforests, the stealing of local communities and Indigenous Peoples lands,

More information

STAFF REGULATIONS AS AT 1 JANUARY

STAFF REGULATIONS AS AT 1 JANUARY Original: English 14 February 2018 COUNCIL 108th Session STAFF REGULATIONS AS AT 1 JANUARY 2018 *. * As announced at the 108th Session of the Council, the Staff Regulations reflecting all amendments approved

More information

Canadian Immigration & Investment Consulting Corporation

Canadian Immigration & Investment Consulting Corporation Canadian Immigration & Investment Consulting Corporation How to Immigrate to Canada as a Business Investor or Start Up Visa for New Business First Canadian Place 100 King Street W., Suite 5700 Toronto,

More information

Citizenship and Immigration. Chapter FW 11. Foreign Representatives and their Dependants

Citizenship and Immigration. Chapter FW 11. Foreign Representatives and their Dependants Citizenship and Immigration Chapter Foreign Representatives and their Dependants Table of Contents 1 DIPLOMATS, CONSULAR OFFICERS, REPRESENTATIVES AND OFFICIALS ACCREDITED TO CANADA AND MEMBERS OF THEIR

More information

Report to Parliament. Gender Equity in Indian Registration Act

Report to Parliament. Gender Equity in Indian Registration Act Report to Parliament Gender Equity in Indian Registration Act For information regarding reproduction rights, please contact Public Works and Government Services Canada at: 613-996-6886 or at: droitdauteur.copyright@tpsgc-pwgsc.gc.ca

More information

Temporary Foreign Workers: Recent Research and Current Policy Issues. David Manicom Citizenship and Immigration Canada

Temporary Foreign Workers: Recent Research and Current Policy Issues. David Manicom Citizenship and Immigration Canada Temporary Foreign Workers: Recent Research and Current Policy Issues David Manicom Citizenship and Immigration Canada Metropolis March 14, 2013 The Temporary Foreign Worker Program (TFWP) Human Resources

More information

Official Journal of the European Union L 94/375

Official Journal of the European Union L 94/375 28.3.2014 Official Journal of the European Union L 94/375 DIRECTIVE 2014/36/EU OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND OF THE COUNCIL of 26 February 2014 on the conditions of entry and stay of third-country nationals

More information

RUTGERS POLICY. 3. Who Should Read This Policy All deans, directors, and hiring managers and employees who are foreign nationals

RUTGERS POLICY. 3. Who Should Read This Policy All deans, directors, and hiring managers and employees who are foreign nationals RUTGERS POLICY Section: 60.1.2 Section Title: Universitywide Human Resources Policies & Procedures Policy Name: Employment of Foreign Nationals Formerly Book: 3.1.3 Approval Authority: Senior Vice President

More information

Private Sponsorship of Refugees (PSR) Program Sponsor a refugee Financial support guidelines for sponsoring groups

Private Sponsorship of Refugees (PSR) Program Sponsor a refugee Financial support guidelines for sponsoring groups Private Sponsorship of Refugees (PSR) Program Sponsor a refugee Financial support guidelines for sponsoring groups Overview: The Government of Canada is committed to ensuring that resettled refugees receive

More information

Occupational Health and Safety Act

Occupational Health and Safety Act Occupational Health and Safety Act CHAPTER 7 OF THE ACTS OF 1996 as amended by 2000, c. 28, ss. 86, 87; 2004, c. 6, s. 24; 2007, c. 14, s. 7; 2009, c. 24; 2010, c. 37, ss. 117-126; 2010, c. 66; 2011, c.

More information

Provincial Report: Quebec

Provincial Report: Quebec Migrant workers: precarious and unsupported Provincial Report: Quebec Executive Summary The majority of migrant workers in Quebec are employed in agriculture, and are therefore located in rural, isolated

More information

LEGAL STATUS OF FOREIGNERS IN SPAIN

LEGAL STATUS OF FOREIGNERS IN SPAIN LEGAL STATUS OF FOREIGNERS IN SPAIN The information in this document is addressed to foreigners who wish to come and/or reside in Spain, except for nationals under: -EU citizen status -The Law 45/1999

More information

Canada-British Columbia Immigration Agreement

Canada-British Columbia Immigration Agreement Home > About us > Laws and policies > Agreements > Federal-Provincial/Territorial > British Columbia Canada-British Columbia Immigration Agreement Annex F: Temporary Foreign Workers 2010 1.0 Preamble 1.1

More information

DO NOT SUBMIT WITH APPLICATION

DO NOT SUBMIT WITH APPLICATION This Agreement made at Whitehorse, Yukon BETWEEN: The Government of Yukon, Department of Economic Development, as represented by the Immigration Unit (the Immigration Unit ) AND: AND: (collectively the

More information

CITY COUNCIL REMUNERATION BY-LAW

CITY COUNCIL REMUNERATION BY-LAW CITY COUNCIL REMUNERATION BY-LAW Consolidation of By-law 39-2005 approved March 30, 2005. Amended by By-laws 32-2010, 58-2010, 25-2011 and 72-2011. Note: This consolidation is prepared for convenience

More information

CONVENTION ON SOCIAL SECURITY BETWEEN THE GOVERNMENT OF CANADA AND THE GOVERNMENT OF THE UNITED KINGDOM OF GREAT BRITAIN AND NORTHERN IRELAND

CONVENTION ON SOCIAL SECURITY BETWEEN THE GOVERNMENT OF CANADA AND THE GOVERNMENT OF THE UNITED KINGDOM OF GREAT BRITAIN AND NORTHERN IRELAND CONVENTION ON SOCIAL SECURITY BETWEEN THE GOVERNMENT OF CANADA AND THE GOVERNMENT OF THE UNITED KINGDOM OF GREAT BRITAIN AND NORTHERN IRELAND The Government of Canada and the Government of the United Kingdom

More information

U.S. Department of State SUPPLEMENTAL NONIMMIGRANT VISA APPLICATION Approved OMB 1405-0134 Expires 11/30/2011 Estimated Burden 1 Hour* PLEASE TYPE OR PRINT YOUR ANSWERS IN THE SPACE PROVIDED BELOW EACH

More information

Statutes of the Centrale des syndicats du Québec (CSQ)

Statutes of the Centrale des syndicats du Québec (CSQ) Statutes of the Centrale des syndicats du Québec (CSQ) Document revised June 2003 D11330-A Chapter 1 Name, Mission, Jurisdiction 1.01 Name The Centrale des syndicats du Québec (CSQ) is a Quebec confederation

More information

Ontario Disability Support Program Income Support Directives

Ontario Disability Support Program Income Support Directives Ontario Disability Support Program Income Support Directives 2.5 Tourists, Immigrants, Refugees and Deportees Summary of Policy Income support may be provided to a person with a disability who is a resident

More information

251 Labour Inspection Act of 3 May Parliament has adopted the following Act of the Czech Republic: PART ONE. Article 1

251 Labour Inspection Act of 3 May Parliament has adopted the following Act of the Czech Republic: PART ONE. Article 1 NATLEX Database ISN 71426 Unofficial translation prepared for the International Labour Office. This translation is intended for information purposes only and does not substitute consultation of the authoritative

More information

FIRST SCHEDULE [Regulation 3]

FIRST SCHEDULE [Regulation 3] 1 Government Notices 2017 FIRST SCHEDULE [Regulation 3] REPUBLIC OF MAURITIUS MINISTRY OF EMPLOYMENT APPLICATION FOR WORK PERMIT Type of application Work Permit New Renewal PART I DETAILS OF NON-CITIZEN

More information

Summary on Migrant Worker Management Assessment: Luangmanis Estate in Sabah

Summary on Migrant Worker Management Assessment: Luangmanis Estate in Sabah SUMMARY REPORT Summary on Migrant Worker Management Assessment: Luangmanis Estate in Sabah IOI Group Background IOI Corporation (IOI) engaged BSR to conduct an assessment of the company s migrant worker

More information

AGREEMENT ON SOCIAL SECURITY BETWEEN CANADA AND THE UNITED MEXICAN STATES

AGREEMENT ON SOCIAL SECURITY BETWEEN CANADA AND THE UNITED MEXICAN STATES AGREEMENT ON SOCIAL SECURITY BETWEEN CANADA AND THE UNITED MEXICAN STATES The Government of Canada and the Government of the United Mexican States, Resolved to co-operate in the field of social security,

More information

PUBLIC COUNCIL OF THE EUROPEAN UNION. Brussels, 25 November /03 LIMITE MIGR 89

PUBLIC COUNCIL OF THE EUROPEAN UNION. Brussels, 25 November /03 LIMITE MIGR 89 Conseil UE COUNCIL OF THE EUROPEAN UNION Brussels, 5 November 003 3954/03 PUBLIC LIMITE MIGR 89 OUTCOME OF PROCEEDINGS of : Working Party on Migration and Expulsion on : October 003 No. prev. doc. : 986/0

More information

november 2012 Business Immigration

november 2012 Business Immigration november 2012 Business Immigration 2400, 525-8th Avenue SW, Calgary, Alberta T2P 1G1 Phone: 403-260-0100 Fax: 403-260-0332 www.bdplaw.com On Record Contents: Canadian Visitors to the United States Page

More information

MANHATTAN COLLEGE J-1 PROGRAM HANDBOOK A GUIDE TO IMMIGRATION MATTERS FOR J-1 PROFESSORS AND SCHOLARS

MANHATTAN COLLEGE J-1 PROGRAM HANDBOOK A GUIDE TO IMMIGRATION MATTERS FOR J-1 PROFESSORS AND SCHOLARS MANHATTAN COLLEGE J-1 PROGRAM HANDBOOK A GUIDE TO IMMIGRATION MATTERS FOR J-1 PROFESSORS AND SCHOLARS This handbook contains information about the rules and regulations which apply to visitors to the United

More information

The Status of Migrant Farm Workers in Canada, 2005

The Status of Migrant Farm Workers in Canada, 2005 UFCW Canada Fifth Annual National Report on The Status of Migrant Farm Workers in Canada, 2005 Presented June 2006 to: The Right Honourable Stephen Harper Prime Minister Wayne Hanley National Director

More information

Lao People s Democratic Republic. Peace Independence Democracy Unity Prosperity. Decree. on importing of foreign workers into Lao PDR

Lao People s Democratic Republic. Peace Independence Democracy Unity Prosperity. Decree. on importing of foreign workers into Lao PDR Lao People s Democratic Republic Peace Independence Democracy Unity Prosperity Ministry of Labour and Social Welfare No. 5418/MLSW Vientiane, 10 December 2007 Decree on importing of foreign workers into

More information

SC407 SPONSORSHIP CHECKLIST AND OBLIGATIONS UPDATED AUG Ability to comply with obligations. seekvisa.com.au CHECKLIST

SC407 SPONSORSHIP CHECKLIST AND OBLIGATIONS UPDATED AUG Ability to comply with obligations. seekvisa.com.au CHECKLIST SC407 seekvisa.com.au UPDATED AUG 2017 SPONSORSHIP CHECKLIST AND OBLIGATIONS CHECKLIST Provide these documents only if your business has been operating less than 12 months or the business employs less

More information

Consulate of Mexico in Calgary

Consulate of Mexico in Calgary Consulate of Mexico in Calgary OUR TEAM Program Coordinator Liaison Officer Liaison Officer Isadora Espinoza Israel Mendoza Ybis Perez TOPICS Statistics LMO request process Equipment, Safety and Insurance

More information

Artists and Cultural Workers in Canadian Municipalities

Artists and Cultural Workers in Canadian Municipalities Artists and Cultural Workers in Canadian Municipalities Based on the 2011 National Household Survey Vol. 13 No. 1 Prepared by Kelly Hill Hill Strategies Research Inc., December 2014 ISBN 978-1-926674-36-0;

More information

S A S K A T C H E W A N N E W D E M O C R A T I C P A R T Y CONSTITUTION

S A S K A T C H E W A N N E W D E M O C R A T I C P A R T Y CONSTITUTION S A S K A T C H E W A N N E W D E M O C R A T I C P A R T Y 1122 Saskatchewan Drive Regina, Saskatchewan S4P 0C4 CONSTITUTION As Revised October 2017 ARTICLE 1 NAME AND PURPOSE 1.1 The name of the organization

More information

CONSTITUTION. BRITISH COLUMBIA FEDERATION OF LABOUR (CLC) (Chartered by the Canadian Labour Congress)

CONSTITUTION. BRITISH COLUMBIA FEDERATION OF LABOUR (CLC) (Chartered by the Canadian Labour Congress) CONSTITUTION BRITISH COLUMBIA FEDERATION OF LABOUR (CLC) (Chartered by the Canadian Labour Congress) Amended by Convention: November 28 to December 3, 2016 Approved by CLC Canadian Council: June 20, 2017

More information

Staff Rules of the International Criminal Court. (As amended, entered into force on 27 July 2015, see ICC/AI/2015/004/Cor.1)

Staff Rules of the International Criminal Court. (As amended, entered into force on 27 July 2015, see ICC/AI/2015/004/Cor.1) Staff Rules of the International Criminal Court (As amended, entered into force on 27 July 2015, see ICC/AI/2015/004/Cor.1) Contents SCOPE AND PURPOSE... 8 CHAPTER I: DUTIES, OBLIGATIONS AND PRIVILEGES...

More information

The Constitution and Bylaws of Upper Canada District District 26 of the Ontario Secondary School Teachers Federation. District Constitution

The Constitution and Bylaws of Upper Canada District District 26 of the Ontario Secondary School Teachers Federation. District Constitution The Constitution and Bylaws of Upper Canada District District 26 of the Ontario Secondary School Teachers Federation District Constitution Amended: May 2, 2018 Page - 1 The Constitution and Bylaws of Upper

More information

THE ALIENS ACT (Official Gazette 130/11) I GENERAL PROVISIONS. Article 1

THE ALIENS ACT (Official Gazette 130/11) I GENERAL PROVISIONS. Article 1 THE ALIENS ACT (Official Gazette 130/11) I GENERAL PROVISIONS Article 1 (1) This Act regulates conditions for the entry, movement and the work of aliens and the conditions of work, and the rights of posted

More information

National Report: Canada

National Report: Canada Migrant workers: precarious and unsupported National Report: Canada Executive Summary The federal government funds newcomer settlement services across the country, but migrant workers in the two federal

More information

Comparative Study on the Employment of Foreign Nationals in France, Slovenia, Bosnia and Herzegovina (BiH) and Montenegro

Comparative Study on the Employment of Foreign Nationals in France, Slovenia, Bosnia and Herzegovina (BiH) and Montenegro Comparative Study on the Employment of Foreign Nationals in France, Slovenia, Bosnia and Herzegovina (BiH) and Montenegro November 2010 This comparative study is being carried out on behalf of the International

More information

The Law Office of Linda M. Hoffman, P.C. Visa and Immigration Options

The Law Office of Linda M. Hoffman, P.C. Visa and Immigration Options The Law Office of Linda M. Hoffman, P.C. 919 18 th Street, N.W., Suite 250 Washington, D.C. 20006 Tel: (202) 331-9450 Fax: (202) 466-8151 www.hoffmanvisalaw.com Immigrant Visa Green Card Visa and Immigration

More information

Factsheet on non-lucrative residence visas

Factsheet on non-lucrative residence visas Factsheet on non-lucrative residence visas These visas allow the holder to remain in Spain for more than 90 days without undertaking any type of work or professional activity. Regulations The procedures

More information

DECREE No. 21/2001/ND-CP OF MAY 28, 2001 DETAILING THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE ORDINANCE ON ENTRY, EXIT AND RESIDENCE OF FOREIGNERS IN VIETNAM THE

DECREE No. 21/2001/ND-CP OF MAY 28, 2001 DETAILING THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE ORDINANCE ON ENTRY, EXIT AND RESIDENCE OF FOREIGNERS IN VIETNAM THE DECREE No. 21/2001/ND-CP OF MAY 28, 2001 DETAILING THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE ORDINANCE ON ENTRY, EXIT AND RESIDENCE OF FOREIGNERS IN VIETNAM THE GOVERNMENT Pursuant to the Law on Organization of the Government

More information

FEANTSA Toolkit. Free Movement of EU citizens! and access to social assistance! Guidance for Homeless Service Providers

FEANTSA Toolkit. Free Movement of EU citizens! and access to social assistance! Guidance for Homeless Service Providers FEANTSA Toolkit Free Movement of EU citizens! and access to social assistance! Guidance for Homeless Service Providers The right to free movement between European Union (EU) Member States is one of the

More information

APPLYING TO WORK OR IMMIGRATE TO CANADA MARCH

APPLYING TO WORK OR IMMIGRATE TO CANADA MARCH APPLYING TO WORK OR IMMIGRATE TO CANADA MARCH 19, 2009 Citizenship and Citoyennet et Immigration Canada Immigration Canada Canada Visa Offices in the U.S. BUFFALO Regional Processing Centre Receives all

More information

C189 - Domestic Workers Convention, 2011 (No. 189)

C189 - Domestic Workers Convention, 2011 (No. 189) C189 - Domestic Workers Convention, 2011 (No. 189) Convention concerning decent work for domestic workers (Entry into force: 05 Sep 2013)Adoption: Geneva, 100th ILC session (16 Jun 2011) - Status: Up-to-date

More information

MEXICO (Tier 2) Recommendations for Mexico:

MEXICO (Tier 2) Recommendations for Mexico: MEXICO (Tier 2) Mexico is a large source, transit, and destination country for men, women, and children subjected to sex trafficking and forced labor. Groups considered most vulnerable to human trafficking

More information

Farmworkers from afar. Results from an international study of seasonal farmworkers from Mexico and the Caribbean working on Ontario farms

Farmworkers from afar. Results from an international study of seasonal farmworkers from Mexico and the Caribbean working on Ontario farms Farmworkers Results from an international study of seasonal farmworkers from Mexico and the Caribbean working on Ontario farms Acknowledgements is a not-for-profit corporation established in 1976 to provide

More information

Tri-Partite Agreement for the Yukon Nominee Program (TPA) Tri-Partite Agreement (TPA) for the Yukon Nominee Program

Tri-Partite Agreement for the Yukon Nominee Program (TPA) Tri-Partite Agreement (TPA) for the Yukon Nominee Program Tri-Partite Agreement (TPA) for the Yukon Nominee Program This Agreement made at Whitehorse, Yukon BETWEEN: AND: The Yukon Government, Department of Education, as represented by the Assistant Deputy Minister

More information

9 ROADSIDE MEMORIAL SIGNAGE PROGRAM

9 ROADSIDE MEMORIAL SIGNAGE PROGRAM 9 ROADSIDE MEMORIAL SIGNAGE PROGRAM (Regional Council a its meeting on April 24, 2008 did not adopt this Clause.) The Transportation and Works Committee recommends the adoption of the recommendations contained

More information

Post-Secondary Education, Training and Labour January New Brunswick Analysis 2016 Census Topic: Immigration

Post-Secondary Education, Training and Labour January New Brunswick Analysis 2016 Census Topic: Immigration Post-Secondary Education, Training and Labour January 2018 New Brunswick Analysis 2016 Census Topic: Contents General Information... 2 Overview... 2 Population... 2 Demographics... 3 Sub-Provincial...

More information

Healthy food, healthy farms, healthy workers. Let s protect the health of migrant farm workers.

Healthy food, healthy farms, healthy workers. Let s protect the health of migrant farm workers. Key Contacts See www.migrantworker.ca for more key contact numbers in various communities. OHIP Inquiries and Registration OHIP SAWP inquiries 905 521 7184 ServiceOntario Hamilton office 905 521 7100 ServiceOntario

More information

International Labour Convention Ratified by Guyana

International Labour Convention Ratified by Guyana International Labour Convention Ratified by Guyana As of July 2003, the following 41 conventions, ratified by Guyana, are in force. Guyana has international treaty obligations to bring its laws and practice

More information

Paper presented for. International Health Policy. Nicolette Merino. Originally Submitted 4/3/03. Revised 4/22/03

Paper presented for. International Health Policy. Nicolette Merino. Originally Submitted 4/3/03. Revised 4/22/03 Paper presented for International Health Policy Nicolette Merino Originally Submitted 4/3/03 Revised 4/22/03 Current strained relationships between the Dominican Republic and Haiti stem from decades of

More information

STRENGTHENING RURAL CANADA: Summary of Rural Ontario Community Visits

STRENGTHENING RURAL CANADA: Summary of Rural Ontario Community Visits STRENGTHENING RURAL CANADA: Summary of Rural Ontario Community Visits Prepared for the Strengthening Rural Canada initiative by Essential Skills Ontario and RESDAC INTRODUCTION Strengthening Rural Canada-Renforcer

More information

VACA VALLEY FIGURE SKATING CLUB, INC. BYLAWS/ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION. Member club of the United States Figure Skating Association

VACA VALLEY FIGURE SKATING CLUB, INC. BYLAWS/ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION. Member club of the United States Figure Skating Association VACA VALLEY FIGURE SKATING CLUB, INC. BYLAWS/ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION Member club of the United States Figure Skating Association ARTICLE I Name and Corporation Section 1. The Organization shall be known

More information

1ST SESSION, 42ND LEGISLATURE, ONTARIO 67 ELIZABETH II, Bill 66

1ST SESSION, 42ND LEGISLATURE, ONTARIO 67 ELIZABETH II, Bill 66 1ST SESSION, 42ND LEGISLATURE, ONTARIO 67 ELIZABETH II, 2018 Bill 66 An Act to restore Ontario's competitiveness by amending or repealing certain Acts The Hon. T. Smith Minister of Economic Development,

More information

Reciprocal Agreements with Canadian Actors Equity Association

Reciprocal Agreements with Canadian Actors Equity Association Reciprocal Agreements with Canadian Actors Equity Association Table of Contents Agreement Between Canadian Actors Equity Association and Union Des Artistes On The Definition of their Respective Jurisdictions....

More information

Piracy, the curse of maritime transport Seminar on Piracy and Armed Robbery at Sea 28 March 2012, Brussels

Piracy, the curse of maritime transport Seminar on Piracy and Armed Robbery at Sea 28 March 2012, Brussels (As delivered) Piracy, the curse of maritime transport Seminar on Piracy and Armed Robbery at Sea 28 March 2012, Brussels Session 3 The human cost of piracy Keynote speech by Ms. Natalie Shaw, ICS Presentation

More information

Federal Budget An analysis of the Budget Implementation Bill (C-38) affecting labour market policy

Federal Budget An analysis of the Budget Implementation Bill (C-38) affecting labour market policy Federal Budget 2012 An analysis of the Budget Implementation Bill (C-38) affecting labour market policy EMPLOYMENT INSURANCE The Unemployed and Job Search Requirements The HRSDC Minister will be given

More information

TEMPORARY LABOUR MIGRATION PROGRAM

TEMPORARY LABOUR MIGRATION PROGRAM IOM International Organization for Migration OIM Organización Internacional para las Migraciones TEMPORARY LABOUR MIGRATION PROGRAM GUATEMALA - CANADA Günther Müssig Quebec, Canada, February 2009 LABOUR

More information

ILO Convention 29 Forced Labour Convention, The General Conference of the International Labour Organisation,

ILO Convention 29 Forced Labour Convention, The General Conference of the International Labour Organisation, ILO Convention 29 Forced Labour Convention, 1930 The General Conference of the International Labour Organisation, Having been convened at Geneva by the Governing Body of the International Labour Office,

More information

Low Skilled Worker Pilot Project

Low Skilled Worker Pilot Project Low Skilled Worker Pilot Project NATIONAL CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION LAW SECTION CANADIAN BAR ASSOCIATION May 2006 865 Carling Avenue, Suite 500, Ottawa, Ontario K1S 5S8 Tel/Tél: 613 237-2925 Toll free/sans

More information

ADVANCE UNEDITED VERSION

ADVANCE UNEDITED VERSION ADVANCE UNEDITED VERSION Distr.: General 20 April 2017 Original: English English, French and Spanish only Committee on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of Their Families

More information

An Act respecting income support, employment assistance and social solidarity

An Act respecting income support, employment assistance and social solidarity NATIONAL ASSEMBLY SECOND SESSION THIRTY-FIFTH LEGISLATURE Bill 186 (1998, chapter 36) An Act respecting income support, employment assistance and social solidarity Introduced 18 December 1997 Passage in

More information

Northwest Territories Nominee Program Business Stream. Application Guidelines

Northwest Territories Nominee Program Business Stream. Application Guidelines Northwest Territories Nominee Program Business Stream Application Guidelines Table of Contents Effective August 29 th, 2018 1.0 Introduction... 1 2.0 Service Standards... 2 3.0 Purpose of the Nominee Program...

More information

Ad-hoc query on admission of students to study at institutions of higher education. Requested by LT EMN NCP on 22 nd November 2010

Ad-hoc query on admission of students to study at institutions of higher education. Requested by LT EMN NCP on 22 nd November 2010 Ad-hoc query on admission of students to study at institutions of higher education Requested by LT EMN NCP on 22 nd November 2010 Compilation produced on 31 st January 2011 Responses from Austria, Cyprus,

More information

BYLAWS. Local 917. Canadian Union of Public Employees

BYLAWS. Local 917. Canadian Union of Public Employees BYLAWS OF Local 917 Canadian Union of Public Employees Revised November 10, 2017 CUPE 917 BYLAWS TABLE OF CONTENT I. PREAMBLE... 1 II. NAME... 1 III. PRINCIPLES AND OBJECTIVES... 1 IV. DEFINITION OF A

More information

AGREEMENT. Between. BRANT COUNTY ROMAN CATHOLIC SEPARATE SCHOOL BOARD (hereinafter called the "Board") OF THE FIRST PART. And

AGREEMENT. Between. BRANT COUNTY ROMAN CATHOLIC SEPARATE SCHOOL BOARD (hereinafter called the Board) OF THE FIRST PART. And AGREEMENT Between BRANT COUNTY ROMAN CATHOLIC SEPARATE SCHOOL BOARD (hereinafter called the "Board") OF THE FIRST PART And THE BRANT HALDIMAND NORFOLK OCCASIONAL TEACHER LOCAL OF THE ONTARIO ENGLISH CATHOLIC

More information

FAIR LABOR ASSOCIATION INDEPENDENT EXTERNAL MONITORING AGRICULTURAL REPORT

FAIR LABOR ASSOCIATION INDEPENDENT EXTERNAL MONITORING AGRICULTURAL REPORT [2013] FAIR LABOR ASSOCIATION INDEPENDENT EXTERNAL MONITORING AGRICULTURAL REPORT COMPANY: Syngenta Seeds COUNTRY: Thailand PROVINCE: Mae Sot MONITOR: Global Standards AUDIT DATE: February 10 12, 2014

More information

Printed: 8. June THE ALIENS ACT

Printed: 8. June THE ALIENS ACT THE ALIENS ACT I. GENERAL PROVISIONS 2 II. TRAVEL DOCUMENTS 4 III. VISAS 5 IV. ENTRY AND DEPARTURE OF ALIENS 12 V. STAY OF ALIENS 13 VI. RETURN MEASURES 31 VII. IDENTITY DOCUMENTS 42 VIII. REGISTRATION

More information

Canada. Privately Sponsored Refugee Resettlement in. Information Bulletin

Canada. Privately Sponsored Refugee Resettlement in. Information Bulletin Privately Sponsored Refugee Resettlement in Canada Information Bulletin You are interested in resettling to Canada and your application has received an initial review by Canadian officials. Now you are

More information

2017 Bill 17. Third Session, 29th Legislature, 66 Elizabeth II THE LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY OF ALBERTA BILL 17 FAIR AND FAMILY-FRIENDLY WORKPLACES ACT

2017 Bill 17. Third Session, 29th Legislature, 66 Elizabeth II THE LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY OF ALBERTA BILL 17 FAIR AND FAMILY-FRIENDLY WORKPLACES ACT 2017 Bill 17 Third Session, 29th Legislature, 66 Elizabeth II THE LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY OF ALBERTA BILL 17 FAIR AND FAMILY-FRIENDLY WORKPLACES ACT THE MINISTER OF LABOUR First Reading.......................................................

More information

SENT BY FAX ONLY TO: FAX:

SENT BY FAX ONLY TO: FAX: ANTHONY MARTINI and ANNETTE MARTINI, Ontario, Canada, Tuesday, April 19, 2016 HON.CHRIS BITTLE (MP) 61 Geneva Street, Unit 1 St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada, L2M 4M6 SENT BY FAX ONLY TO: 1-905-934-1577

More information

TABLE OF CORRESPONDENCE BETWEEN DIRECTIVE 2004/38/EC AND CURRENT EC LEGISLATION ON FREE MOVEMENT AND RESIDENCE OF UNION CITIZENS WITHIN THE EU

TABLE OF CORRESPONDENCE BETWEEN DIRECTIVE 2004/38/EC AND CURRENT EC LEGISLATION ON FREE MOVEMENT AND RESIDENCE OF UNION CITIZENS WITHIN THE EU TABLE OF CORRESPONDENCE BETWEEN DIRECTIVE 2004/38/EC AND CURRENT EC LEGISLATION ON FREE MOVEMENT AND RESIDENCE OF UNION CITIZENS WITHIN THE EU DIRECTIVE 2004/38/EC OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND THE COUNCIL

More information

Chapter : The Modernization of Quebec & the Quiet Revolution. Section 4: Quebec Society under the Lévesque Government ( )

Chapter : The Modernization of Quebec & the Quiet Revolution. Section 4: Quebec Society under the Lévesque Government ( ) Chapter 3 1945-1980: The Modernization of Quebec & the Quiet Revolution Section 4: Quebec Society under the Lévesque Government (1976-1980) Pages that correspond to this presentation Quebec Society under

More information

FEDERAL LAW NO. 115-FZ OF JULY 25, 2002 ON THE LEGAL POSITION OF FOREIGN CITIZENS IN THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION

FEDERAL LAW NO. 115-FZ OF JULY 25, 2002 ON THE LEGAL POSITION OF FOREIGN CITIZENS IN THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION FEDERAL LAW NO. 115-FZ OF JULY 25, 2002 ON THE LEGAL POSITION OF FOREIGN CITIZENS IN THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION Passed by the State Duma on June 21, 2002 Approved by the Federation Council on July 10, 2002

More information

COUNCIL OF THE EUROPEAN UNION. Brussels, 18 March 2009 (OR. en) 17426/08 Interinstitutional File: 2007/0228 (CNS) MIGR 130 SOC 800

COUNCIL OF THE EUROPEAN UNION. Brussels, 18 March 2009 (OR. en) 17426/08 Interinstitutional File: 2007/0228 (CNS) MIGR 130 SOC 800 COUNCIL OF THE EUROPEAN UNION Brussels, 18 March 2009 (OR. en) 17426/08 Interinstitutional File: 2007/0228 (CNS) MIGR 130 SOC 800 LEGISLATIVE ACTS AND OTHER INSTRUMTS Subject: Council Directive on the

More information

Refocusing Express Entry July Stakeholder Consultations

Refocusing Express Entry July Stakeholder Consultations Refocusing Express Entry July 26 2016 Stakeholder Consultations Express Entry: purpose and objectives Since launch on January 1, 2015, Express Entry has represented a major shift in the way Canada selects,

More information

Tourism & Hospitality Sector: Information for Employers

Tourism & Hospitality Sector: Information for Employers Tourism & Hospitality Sector: Information for Employers immigration.govt.nz Disclaimer: this document was verified and reproduced in December 2017, however, immigration policy and instructions are subject

More information

FAIR LABOR ASSOCIATION INDEPENDENT EXTERNAL MONITORING AGRICULTURAL REPORT

FAIR LABOR ASSOCIATION INDEPENDENT EXTERNAL MONITORING AGRICULTURAL REPORT [2013] FAIR LABOR ASSOCIATION INDEPENDENT EXTERNAL MONITORING AGRICULTURAL REPORT COMPANY: Syngenta Seeds COUNTRY: Thailand PROVINCE: Pobpra MONITOR: Global Standards AUDIT DATE: February 13 15, 2014 PRODUCTS:

More information

Opportunities to work in Canada

Opportunities to work in Canada Opportunities to work in Canada Every year, tens of thousands of newcomers create new economic opportunities for themselves and for Canada by joining this country s labour force. Many come to stay in Canada

More information