Evidence of meeting #26 for Citizenship and Immigration in the 41st Parliament, 2nd Session. (The original version is on Parliament’s site, as are the minutes.) The winning word was citizenship.

A video is available from Parliament.

On the agenda

MPs speaking

Also speaking

Avvy Yao-Yao Go  Clinic Director, Metro Toronto Chinese and Southeast Asian Legal Clinic
Paul Attia  Spokesperson, Immigrants for Canada
Bernie M. Farber  Founding Member, Jewish Refugee Action Network (JRAN), As an Individual
Mitchell J. Goldberg  Lawyer, As an Individual

3:30 p.m.

NDP

The Vice-Chair NDP Lysane Blanchette-Lamothe

Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the 26th meeting of the Standing Committee on Citizenship and Immigration.

Today, we are continuing our study of the subject matter of Bill C-24.

Thanks to our witnesses for being with us for this first hour of committee.

With us around the table we have, from Metro Toronto Chinese and Southeast Asian Legal Clinic, Madam Avvy Yao-Yao Go, clinic director. Welcome. From Immigrants for Canada we have Mr. Paul Attia, spokesperson. Welcome. As individuals who will share their time, we have Mr. Bernie M. Farber, founding member, Jewish Refugee Action Network , also known as JRAN, and Mr. Mitchell J. Goldberg, lawyer. Welcome.

We will start right now with the opening remarks.

Madam Yao-Yao Go, you have up to eight minutes. I give you the floor.

3:30 p.m.

Avvy Yao-Yao Go Clinic Director, Metro Toronto Chinese and Southeast Asian Legal Clinic

Thank you.

I'm the clinic director of the Metro Toronto Chinese and Southeast Asian Legal Clinic, which is a non-profit community-based organization providing free legal services to Chinese and other Southeast Asian community members in Toronto. I would like to thank the committee for giving me this opportunity to comment on this bill.

Citizenship defines who we are as a people and as a nation. For Chinese Canadians and many others who had historically been excluded from Canadian citizenship, citizenship is as much about equal respect as it is about a sense of belonging. To ensure we do not repeat the historical mistakes of injustice and exclusion, any change to Canada's Citizenship Act must be examined through the lens of equality and respect.

Under Bill C-24 the pathway to Canadian citizenship will become more restrictive and the avenue for the Canadian government to revoke citizenship will be widened. Furthermore, Bill C-24 will disproportionately exclude certain groups of immigrants from citizenship, most notably women, as well as immigrants from certain racialized communities. In the remainder of my time I will summarize why that is the case.

First, the bill proposes to increase the residency requirement from the current three over four, to four over six years, which will automatically increase the time it will take for someone to become a citizen. But more troubling, however, is the non-recognition of the time spent prior to obtaining permanent resident status. This change will negatively affect refugees. It will also affect live-in caregivers who are overwhelmingly women of colour and who have to endure years of exploitative working conditions just to acquire the permanent resident status. It may also affect women who enter Canada as sponsored spouses and are subject to the two-year conditional permanent resident requirement.

Second, not only is the new intent to reside provision unfair, as it only applies to people who are naturalized citizens, not people who are born in Canada, but it could lead to revocation of citizenship from Canadians who are deemed to have obtained their citizenship status by misrepresenting their intent to reside, even when they may have legitimate reasons to leave Canada, such as for employment reasons or family obligations. As well, this provision is potentially in breach of section 6 of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, which guarantees the mobility rights to all Canadian citizens, both native born and naturalized alike, as well as section 15 of the charter, the equality rights provision.

Third, the bill dramatically expands the group of individuals who have to meet the language and knowledge requirement in order to become citizens, without the use of an interpreter, from those between the ages of 18 and 54 to those between the ages of 14 and 64. This will have a serious impact on refugees, as well as new Canadians who come under the family class program, including sponsored women who came as a sponsored spouse, as well as parents and grandparents.

As I noted in my paper, the average age of parents and grandparents at the time of arrival is only 60, so a large majority will be affected by this rule. It will also have a disproportionate negative impact on immigrants from countries where English is not the first language, and the majority of those are racialized immigrants.

Fourth is the new ministerial power to strip citizenship from dual citizens based on foreign convictions of treason, terrorism, and the like. There are two main problems. First, it creates a two-tier citizenship status, separating those who have dual citizenship from those who do not. Second, this provision applies even if the convictions are handed down by countries that have questionable human rights records and don't obey the rule of law. Under this new rule, even Nelson Mandela could have been stripped of his honorary Canadian citizenship status because he was convicted of treason under the South African government during the apartheid era. As one of your previous witnesses pointed out, about 150,000 Canadians are dual citizens by birth; they too will be affected by this change.

The bill also finally proposes to replace the automatic right of appeal to the Federal Court with an application for judicial review with leave from the court. This will not only limit the access for applicants to challenge negative decisions, but more importantly, it will reduce judicial oversight of the ministerial exercise of power.

Along with a number of other changes, including the fee increase and the tougher language requirement, the passage of this bill will mean fewer immigrants can become citizens of Canada.

Apart from considering the fact that there will be more disenfranchised immigrants, we also need to examine what these changes could mean for Canada. The vast majority of Canadians embrace such fundamental values of an inclusive society, such as the principles of equality, rule of law, and democracy, which we all strive to achieve in part by ensuring that every person in Canada has equal access to the most important right of all, namely the right to become a citizen. Denying immigrants that right signals to them that they are not welcome in Canada.

It is in Canada's interest to allow more immigrants to become citizens. Newcomers who cannot become citizens will not see Canada as their home and will have second thoughts about whether they should put down their roots in this country, and both they and Canada will lose.

Rather than moving forward to becoming a more inclusive and equal society by making citizenship more accessible to all immigrants, Bill C-24 will take us back to the era of exclusion and discrimination by denying many immigrants the right to call Canada their home. Therefore we respectfully ask the committee to adopt the recommendations we have highlighted in our written submission, to reinforce the true value of Canadian citizenship while at the same time promoting the interests of Canada.

Thank you.

3:35 p.m.

NDP

Lysane Blanchette-Lamothe NDP Pierrefonds—Dollard, QC

Thank you, Madam Yao-Yao Go.

Mr. Attia, you now have the floor, sir. Go ahead.

3:35 p.m.

Paul Attia Spokesperson, Immigrants for Canada

Thank you and good afternoon, everyone.

We thank you for the opportunity to be here to present to this committee on such an important matter. Immigrants for Canada is honoured and privileged to be here.

I am honoured to be here on behalf of Immigrants for Canada as their spokesperson, and the views that I articulate and posit today are those of the members of the organization. To that end, I shall aim to keep my comments focused on the issues that fall within the ambit of Immigrants for Canada.

We are a national grassroots organization made up of, as you can imagine, immigrants to Canada; either having immigrated here ourselves, or being born to parents who immigrated here. Our membership base includes thousands of persons from across the entire country. Our backgrounds are as diverse as you can imagine. We have members from a plethora of countries of origin, from all faiths, and from all socio-economic backgrounds. As I mentioned, we are diverse, to say the least. However, we are strongly unified in one central but key area, and that is our values. It is that, our values and our commitment to Canada, that unites us.

Inevitably, all of us here today will disagree on some issues; however, every one of our members, and every person in this room and listening to this debate, can all be certain of one thing, one thing that we can all take great pride in. The mere fact that we are here having this discussion and this debate in a public forum is a credit to our country of Canada, and is the strongest proof-positive that all of us who have immigrated here have made the right choice. Open and public debate is not something taken for granted by us.

To become a supporter or member of Immigrants for Canada, one must adopt our charter of principles, and based on this charter of principles and these values, I shall make my comments today.

Immigrants for Canada holds that citizenship in Canada is a privilege. To that end, we believe that it should be available to all, but provided to those who have earned it. It should be cherished. Our members came to this country, have made it our adopted home, and we greatly value our Canadian citizenship. We support the new residency requirements, increasing them from three years to four years out of six, and question whether 183 days per year for any one or all of those four years is sufficient.

Immigrants for Canada holds that all citizens of Canada should have language proficiency in English or French. Language is a unifier. It is what allows us to communicate with our fellow citizens, and to engage in our community and our new country. Whether calling 911, going to the bank, or seeking work, the ability to communicate in either English or French will only assist in that regard. In fact, the person who benefits the most from that is the new citizen themselves, and we fully support the broadening of that age range. Of course, some qualifications need to be made, which I would be happy to address. Some have been addressed in previous sessions, and of course, certain issues should be raised.

With respect to revocation, in principle and based on our organization's view that citizenship is a privilege, we strongly support the notion of revocation of citizenship for committing acts of terror, or for obtaining citizenship via fraud. However—and I think it's important to note this—the concern that I would raise on this particular issue is that the process needs to be in line with the fundamental values of our Canadian and democratic society.

As many of you know, and as many of the people in this room are familiar with personally, we have arrived here from various countries of origin, and the definition of democracy in some of these countries may not be in line with ours. Two wolves and one sheep casting a vote as to what to have for dinner is not democracy by Canadian standards. Sometimes people think because a lot of people want something, that it's correct. That's not true. The reality is that we have a constitutional democracy, and we have certain principles in place. This is an area that falls directly within our ambit. We support the idea of revocation, but we think that perhaps a form of review on the decisions with respect to that should be in place that protects all involved. That is a value that we as Immigrants for Canada hold as near and dear to Canadian society: judicial review for important decisions.

As well, with respect to criminal convictions for foreign offences, there needs to be some look given to that as well. There was an earlier example of Nelson Mandela, and I think that's an appropriate one. Obviously sometimes an act or a principle here that would be well within Canadian law, would be deemed criminal in a foreign country, and that needs to be given a look as well.

If I may, with my remaining time, let me close with this illustration that I think puts our position in place and makes it rather clear.

As you all know, this past year was a special one for all of us in this country as we enjoyed the Winter Olympics, in which Canada did very well. In particular both our men's and women's hockey teams did very well. I brought here with me today my Team Canada hockey jersey. I wasn't playing, but I got one made with my name on it. It was actually a gift. Now I, of course, have purposely chosen an example rich in Canadian irony. For the record, personally, don't ever ask me to get on skates. I didn't learn how to play hockey, let alone skate, until I was in my early thirties. I was, of course, too busy working in the family restaurant, growing up as a kid.

But we at Immigrants for Canada view citizenship like being a member of a team. Everyone has the opportunity and the chance to try out for that team, but you have to meet certain requirements. You have to show up to practice—that's residency. You have to be able to communicate with your teammates—that's the language issue. Also you can't lie your way onto the team, spy on your teammates, or try to kill them—that's revocation based on those enumerated factors.

Thank you.

3:45 p.m.

NDP

The Vice-Chair NDP Lysane Blanchette-Lamothe

Thank you, Mr. Attia.

Mr. Farber and Mr. Goldberg, you now have the floor.

3:45 p.m.

Bernie M. Farber Founding Member, Jewish Refugee Action Network (JRAN), As an Individual

Good afternoon.

[The witness spoke in his language]

This is the diversity of our great country.

Good afternoon, members of the committee, and thank you for this opportunity to appear before you to speak on Bill C-24. My name is Bernie Farber, and beside me is my friend and colleague Mitchell Goldberg. We both bring varied experiences to this presentation, I as a human rights activist and now a semi-retired journalist, and Mitch as an immigration law expert, but we wish to speak to you today as members of the Jewish Refugee Action Network, JRAN.

For those who are not familiar with us, JRAN is a national organization and we bring individuals together from diverse backgrounds who are deeply concerned about the changes made in 2012 to Canada's refugee determination system and to refugee health care coverage. We are a Jewish initiative that invites multifaith, multicultural support, and we welcome the involvement of individuals throughout Canada.

The Jewish community, of course, has a deep connection to the refugee and immigration experience. From the Exodus and the experience of slavery in Egypt, to the shameful refusal by Canada to receive 900 Jewish refugees who managed to escape Germany in 1939 aboard the St. Louis, of which two-thirds were killed in Nazi concentration camps. But we also know from our experience and the experience of other communities that many refugees, when treated with fairness and compassion, go on to become contributing citizens. Both my parents were refugees, both of them fleeing anti-Semitism in countries of eastern Europe, and both of them coming here basically stateless, basically without a penny to their name, and making lives for themselves and for their children and for their grandchildren.

Citizenship must be something refugees aspire to as a reason for hope, many having overcome unimaginable trauma, as did my own parents. It is, therefore, only just for our federal government to ensure a reasonable path to citizenship for refugees.

That brings me to why we are here today. JRAN is deeply concerned that Bill C-24 will make citizenship not a rewarding end to their long and difficult journey, but an unreachable destination filled with roadblocks and diversions. Let me just give you a few examples.

Financial barriers—there are new and increased costs to becoming a citizen. The government is tripling the application fee, which will be added to the new cost imposed on applicants a year ago when the government privatized language testing. The price of applying for citizenship will now cost four times more than it did in 2006. The path to citizenship should not be a toll road. Tapping some of the most vulnerable among us for user fees is nothing more than a cash grab that is both unseemly and counterproductive.

Language barriers—Bill C-24 extends the difficult language testing process to include applicants aged 14 to 64, rather than 18 to 55 as it is presently. Consider this; children and grandparents will now be affected. This appears to be yet another barrier to citizenship made all the more difficult when you consider previous federal government cuts to language training programs for newcomers.

The bureaucratic barrier—under the proposed law, applicants for Canadian citizenship will now have to be permanent residents for four years, instead of three, before they can become citizens. In addition, accepted refugees to Canada will no longer receive credit for time spent in Canada as recognized refugees before they obtain permanent residence. These, my friends, we believe are arbitrary, unnecessary, and unjust wait times.

I will now invite my colleague Mitchell Goldberg to provide some more specific areas of concern.

3:45 p.m.

Mitchell J. Goldberg Lawyer, As an Individual

Thank you, Bernie.

The intent to reside provision, on the face of it, on paper, doesn't sound so terrible. What's wrong with forcing people to sign a declaration that they're going to live in Canada? Except when you think of the impact it's going to have on new Canadians, it's going to create a polar vortex chill. I, the lawyer, will have to advise my clients that if they leave Canada because their child gets accepted into a university, they get a job overseas, they go to take care of a sick relative, they're taking a risk that their citizenship will be stripped from them, that some bureaucrat will speculate on what their true intentions were when they became citizens.

We think that's wrong.

My daughter applied to go to universities in the United States. She worked in Maine. Why shouldn't new Canadians have those very same rights? In our view, the whole concept of banishment, citizenship-stripping, for people who have....

On the one hand you say, they're criminals. Why should we have any sympathy for criminals? I absolutely agree. That's why we have a criminal justice system and we believe the full weight of the law should be thrown against anybody who commits a criminal offence. If they deserve to go to jail for life, so be it. But deporting, removing citizenship, banishing people, is un-Canadian. Our late Prime Minister Diefenbaker recognized this in the context that thousands of Japanese had their citizenship stripped from them.

Furthermore, we agree that citizenship should be revoked in cases of fraud. If someone lies about the process of getting to be a citizen, their citizenship deserves to be taken away, but otherwise that is totally unjust and unconstitutional.

As Avvy Go said before, the intent to reside provision is a violation of section 6 of the Canadian charter with regard to mobility rights. We think that all Canadians, whatever their origin, deserve a truly strengthened citizenship.

Thank you very much.

3:50 p.m.

NDP

Lysane Blanchette-Lamothe NDP Pierrefonds—Dollard, QC

Thank you very much to all of you.

Now we'll go to our questions. We'll start with Mr. Menegakis. Sir, you have up to seven minutes.

3:50 p.m.

Conservative

Costas Menegakis Conservative Richmond Hill, ON

Thank you very much, Madam Chair, and thank you to our witnesses for appearing before us today and for your testimonies.

First of all, I want to correct the record because I heard the words “cash grab” in the testimony, because the fees are going to be increased to $300. For your information, Mr. Farber, it costs us $550 to process a citizenship application. This will just be bringing it closer to what someone should be paying. When you compare it to our peer countries, in the United States, it's the equivalent of $669.48 Canadian. In the United Kingdom, it's $1,615.94 Canadian. In New Zealand, it's $433.64 Canadian, just to put things in perspective. It's asking citizenship applicants to bear more of the costs of what it actually costs for that application to come to the country.

Mr. Attia, recently there was an article in a Korean outlet about the importance of implementing Bill C-24 as soon as possible. The article explained that the sooner the bill gets passed, the sooner wait times will be reduced to under a year. We know that we here in Canada welcome a record number of immigrants and new citizens. We average better than a quarter of a million new immigrants per year and since 2006 we have welcomed over 1.4 million new Canadians. These are record numbers.

As a Conservative government we have the highest sustained level of immigration in Canadian history. Under the new decision-making model, citizenship cases will go from a three-step process to a one-step process.

Streamlining this application process to less than a year, how do you think this will affect immigrants and newcomers hoping to become Canadian citizens?

3:50 p.m.

Spokesperson, Immigrants for Canada

Paul Attia

Thank you for the question. Obviously, in principle, I think the idea of streamlining is one that we'd all agreed to. I think it is more appealing to immigrants, particularly obviously those who are abiding by the residency requirements. They've shown a significant interest and commitment to the country and want to take the next step of becoming Canadian citizens.

Again, my only qualifier on that is that the process be one that is fair and complete, as I mentioned before, and as long as those checks are on point, then that process, which is fair and effective, will also be an efficient one.

Thank you.

3:55 p.m.

Conservative

Costas Menegakis Conservative Richmond Hill, ON

As you know, it's been some 37 years since the Citizenship Act has been examined, and on the fee side, it's been 20 years. With changes to Bill C-24 we're trying to make it quicker for people to obtain citizenship, but at the same time, balancing that with the integrity of citizenship.

It's not an easy thing that you come here and automatically get it. My parents came, I suspect like members of your family, and it was a five-year waiting period. It was one of the highlights of their lives when they obtained Canadian citizenship. In the new legislation, a change to the Citizenship Act that we're proposing, is that it become four of the last six years. We want to integrate people more into Canadian society so they can have a better opportunity to have successful outcomes once they are here.

We have to balance those two. Do you have any thoughts on where the majority of the balance should lie?

3:55 p.m.

Spokesperson, Immigrants for Canada

Paul Attia

Thank you again for the question. Yes, in 1947, in my understanding, it was a five-year requirement. Then the act was amended in 1977. I'm not going to comment on whether or not I was born the last time this act was amended, but I wasn't, so it's been some time. It then changed to three years and now it's proposed to be four of six years with those four years being a minimum of 183 days.

I am in favour, and the organization is in favour, of the longer requirement. You want to be able to have the person experience life in Canada and establish life here before he commits to citizenship. Citizenship is meant to say that you are a Canadian now.

I appreciate there is some controversy with respect to the intention to remain, and that is something that will be discussed today. I appreciate the fact that my colleague made that point and I certainly think it needs to be elaborated upon. That was addressed in an earlier session. I think you had some issues with that clarification, and I think it still remains unclear as to what you can do with that, if anything.

Putting the intention to remain issue aside, I think the time requirements as proposed are quite prudent. Again, the first factor is that you experience Canadian life, but the second thing is that, going back to that team analogy, you are saying you want to be part of this team. Citizenship is an active step. You are signing up and saying you want to be a Canadian citizen. It's not the same as applying for refugee status. Here you are applying to be Canadian, and having a commitment to the country. Having shown yourself to have resided here is an important step, and I think the balance struck as proposed is an appropriate one.

3:55 p.m.

Conservative

Costas Menegakis Conservative Richmond Hill, ON

We've heard from some critics of Bill C-24 about the whole issue of dual citizenship and revocation. Mr. Attia, is it reasonable for Canadians to expect that those who obtain Canadian citizenship not perform an act of terror or treason against our troops and our country?

3:55 p.m.

Spokesperson, Immigrants for Canada

Paul Attia

No, I don't think that's unreasonable at all, and I don't know if anybody would think it is unreasonable to say that. Again I say that, with the team analogy, if you're a part of this team, we expect you not to kill your fellow citizens. We expect you not to lie your way onto the team. We expect you not to spy at our practice and then sell it to the other team. I won't say whether it's going to be the Senators versus the Leafs or not. Obviously, that depends on who is in the room.

In fairness to my other colleagues here, the issue and controversy with respect to dual citizenship is the charter issue. Someone who has applied for citizenship and doesn't have dual citizenship can't have it revoked due to the 1961 UN convention; wherein someone who has dual citizenship and breaches it can have it revoked and remain not stateless, obviously. That's an issue that we can't comment on in our organization. We're not a constitutional organization. The charter is not our area of expertise. I would turn that over to others to advise on the constitutionality of that.

3:55 p.m.

Conservative

Costas Menegakis Conservative Richmond Hill, ON

All right, thank you.

3:55 p.m.

NDP

The Vice-Chair NDP Lysane Blanchette-Lamothe

Thank you very much.

Madam Sitsabaiesan, you have the floor.

3:55 p.m.

NDP

Rathika Sitsabaiesan NDP Scarborough—Rouge River, ON

Thank you, Madam Chair, and thank you to all of our witnesses.

I'd like to focus on the residency requirements for the first bit of my questioning, and then move on to the intention to reside, if I have time.

People who spend their time in Canada before they become permanent residents, does that have value in their learning what it means to be a Canadian, building, paying taxes in this country? Also, does the whole Canadian experience have value?

I'm just asking very brief questions. If you want to answer, I will ask a follow-up question afterward.

This is for Mr. Goldberg, Mr. Farber, Ms. Go, or whoever.

4 p.m.

Founding Member, Jewish Refugee Action Network (JRAN), As an Individual

Bernie M. Farber

I think the question is an obvious one and an important one. There is no question in my mind that every day spent in this country for a refugee and a potential immigrant is a day that they honour, and it's a day that they understand much more than they did before. Take a look at people again, like my own parents, who came from autocratic and communist states. One day here, their first day here, was a day of liberation and freedom for them, so every day is multiplied even more after that.

I'll make one more small point. There's a family in Toronto by the name of Pusuma. They are a Roma family, and they are presently in sanctuary in a church in Toronto. They love this country and they're in sanctuary because of a screw-up—excuse the expression—in terms of how the legal case was handled. If they go back to Hungary, they will be targeted possibly for violence, possibly even for death. But they have a four-year-old daughter who loves this country; she knows nothing else. So every day is an important day for an immigrant and for a refugee, no matter where they are.

4 p.m.

NDP

Rathika Sitsabaiesan NDP Scarborough—Rouge River, ON

I'm going to ask my follow-up question and then probably not have much time left. For that young girl, she only knows Canada as home—

4 p.m.

Founding Member, Jewish Refugee Action Network (JRAN), As an Individual

4 p.m.

NDP

Rathika Sitsabaiesan NDP Scarborough—Rouge River, ON

—and this law, as it's written right now, says that girl doesn't know Canada, and with her time in Canada, she doesn't understand what it means to be Canadian. That doesn't make sense in my opinion, and I'm asking you for your more expert opinion.

With the residency requirement piece, in the case of international students who are here for usually three to four to five years, paying taxes if they get a job on campus and getting Canadian experience and education, we're saying that they don't really have value and they're potentially Canadian experience class immigrants who want to stay here and then become citizens.

Second is the case of live-in caregivers, who are usually women and women of colour who are coming into this country. These are usually people who want to eventually become Canadians and then bring their families together and reunify their families and grow as a Canadian family.

Third, Mr. Farber or Mr. Goldberg, you mentioned refugees who seek asylum in this country and come here.

Then one more issue that I think, Ms. Go, you raised in your written submission was that for women, usually, who are here as sponsored spouses during their conditional PR time, this law doesn't stipulate whether that two-year conditional PR time counts toward their citizenship.

I'm going to stop with that and ask what this law should actually do with regard to these four classes of people who are spending time in Canada. I want your recommendations. If you like it, great. If you don't, what is your recommendation for change?

4 p.m.

Lawyer, As an Individual

Mitchell J. Goldberg

I'd recommend that the current system be in place, in that, if somebody is a recognized refugee, granted refugee status by the Immigration and Refugee Board, the waiting time for permanent residence should be counted toward the time allocated towards citizenship. Sometimes that period of time could be one year, two years, or three years. Currently half of that time is calculated toward citizenship. I think that's very reasonable. I would prefer to see that full amount of time, but at least half of the time.

Similarly for the other categories, if people are on a legal status, like live-in caregivers, work permits, students, they're getting Canadian experience. That time should count.

4 p.m.

NDP

Rathika Sitsabaiesan NDP Scarborough—Rouge River, ON

Thank you. So your opinion is that pre-PR time should count.

4 p.m.

Lawyer, As an Individual

4 p.m.

Clinic Director, Metro Toronto Chinese and Southeast Asian Legal Clinic

Avvy Yao-Yao Go

Can I also respond?