Thank you for inviting me to talk to you here today.
I appear in two capacities: first as a professor at the University of Ottawa's Graduate School of Public and International Affairs, where my research is on the experience of refugee sponsors, and second as a coordinator of Rainbow Haven, a community organization that sponsors and settles LGBTQ refugees here in Ottawa.
I am excited and proud to tell you today that my group will welcome five new Canadians this month: a single woman as a result of a successful BVOR match and a family of four as a result of a successful private sponsorship of refugees, or PSR, application.
I have three comments today, and they stem from a combination of my activism and my research. Their focus today is on who in Canada is doing so much of the resettlement work, namely volunteers, volunteers who are people like me who have full-time jobs, kids—sometimes it feels like a million of them, but only two—and yoga classes to attend.
My first comment is this—and you know this: Canada is often described as a leader in the LGBTQ space worldwide. Not only do the laws in Canada offer full and equal protection to every member of the LGBTQ community, but Canada on the whole has also been deliberate and consistent about signalling its commitment to LGBTQ rights abroad.
This consistent commitment is the reason that each year my colleagues and I are optimistic that the government will make permanent what is colloquially known as the “rainbow refugee assistance plan”, which gives groups supporting LGBTQ refugees some financial support and exempts us from quotas; however. each time the program comes up for renewal, it's extended only by one or two years.
I know that members of this committee heard from advocates of the LGBTQ refugees last year calling for the rainbow RAP to be made permanent. I read the enthusiasm for that program's being made permanent among both the witnesses and committee members, but one observation is absent from this testimony: the impact of renewal uncertainty on us, the people who do the work, the volunteers. Here's an example.
Two and a half years ago we submitted a PSR application under the rainbow RAP, the one that I mentioned in my introductory comments, and we began that application knowing that the rainbow RAP was due to expire in three months. We had to proceed without knowing with confidence that the program, the funding, and the “outside of quota” spots, which are especially valuable, would be available to us when the application was complete.
This program, like all of the PSR and the BVOR programs, is successful because of the work that volunteers do. The uncertainty of this program's future can cause us, or them, to sponsor fewer refugees or to operate with considerably increased stress. There is to my mind no reason to force us to operate in that kind of uncertainty. The program is not costly, it's not over-used, and it is relied upon by people deeply committed to the LGBTQ community. There's every reason to remove this unnecessary uncertainty and to signal to that community and those of us who work to support it that our work is valued and recognized.
My first recommendation is this: please finally make this program a permanent member of Canada's refugee resettlement programs.
Second, it is my understanding that since the BVOR program was created in 2012, the government has been really hopeful that Canadians will respond positively to the program, and also that except during the peak response to the Syrian war, response to this program has been underwhelming.
I would like to here strongly encourage the government to persist in supporting this program. There are so many reasons to expand the network of Canadians who contribute to the BVOR program: because it contributes to the pro-refugee sentiment that persists in Canada in spite of political forces that press us in the other direction; because it can increase the number of persons in need of protection, especially highly vulnerable ones who are admitted to Canada; and because it is a great partnership between Canadians and their government to work together in creating an environment in which new Canadians can thrive.
In going forward with this program, which I encourage, I have two specific additional recommendations. The first one is this. For this program to be attractive to refugee advocates, the government must do better at assuring us that it is not using us to carry out its own responsibility. In other words, it must find a way to publicly assure us that the principle of additionality is respected as the BVOR program expands.
Much of the willingness of Canadian volunteers to do this work is predicated on the trust that our work is additional to government contributions in this space. I encourage you to focus on supporting the trust relations on which this willingness depends by explicitly reasserting the government's commitment to additionality. The minister's statements on this program are being watched by us, and the commitment to additionality from that office right now is important for all of us to see.
Second, in order to motivate support for the BVOR program, we obviously need to find Canadians who are interested in spending their time doing refugee resettlement work. To do so, we need to understand why they might want to do it, and not just in a surge moment, as in the response to the Syrians; we need especially to understand whether the energy generated for this kind of work during the surge can be harnessed into an ongoing commitment by Canadians to refugee resettlement.
To my knowledge, putting the specific focus on BVOR-matched sponsors has not yet been done, and it is my recommendation that this study be done as quickly as possible. I know a researcher who is very well poised to do this work so that the government can move forward here on the basis of a solid understanding of how best to motivate Canadians to join the project of resettlement.
The program needs a better name. The name is a problem.
Finally, I would like to emphasize, by way of concluding here, that in light of the recently announced new refugee and immigration admission numbers, it's worth remembering that the world is still watching Canada right now. The decision to promote our private sponsorship program globally has made sure of that. Now is the time to be even bolder in this space.
We've just heard comments explaining why resettlement should be an essential piece of the work we do with respect to refugees, so be bold. Study after study in this country indicates that refugees do well or better, on average, than native-born Canadians do. Study after study indicates that their children flourish. I am one such person—if you think that professors count as flourishing—and I am certain that I am not the only child of a refugee in this room.
The United States has in the last two years dealt a devastating blow to global resettlement efforts. This is a moment when Canada can show it still deserves the compliments of the head of the UNHCR three years ago, when he applauded Canadians' generosity in the face of the exodus of Syrians from their country.
To conclude, let me add my voice—or give voice—to the Canadian Council for Refugees' recently released statement and join them in calling for an increase in the additional number of government-assisted refugees to Canada in 2019. This would be a triple win: we can respond to the grave harm caused by our neighbour to the south; we can showcase again that we as Canadians take seriously the need for Canada to do its fair share of global work to support refugees; and you, the government, can signal to us, the volunteers, that you continue to respect the principle of additionality that motivates so much of our willingness to do this work.
Thank you for your time and for your work on this file.