Thank you, Chair.
Good afternoon, and thank you for the opportunity to discuss the proposed changes to the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act that are included in the budget implementation act.
My name is Philip Somogyvari, and I am director general of strategic policy and planning at Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada. I am joined today by my colleagues Julie Chassé, director general, financial strategy; Marcel Poirier, director, fees and activity based costing; and Jonathan Joshi-Koop, acting director of express entry.
The proposed amendments cover two areas. One is changes to express entry and the second is an exemption from the Service Fees Act for certain fees established under the authority of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act.
Express entry is the application management system for a number of Canada's economic immigration programs. Candidates express an interest to immigrate to Canada, and if they meet the basic requirements of one of the programs managed by express entry, they are placed in a pool of pre-qualified candidates and ranked against one another based on a transparent scoring grid that favours individuals with high human capital. IRCC then invites the top-ranked candidates in the pool to apply for permanent residence through one of the programs through regularly held invitation rounds.
The proposed amendments being sought through division 23 of the budget implementation act will build upon express entry's existing flexibilities and support Canada's economic recovery and future growth by permitting the department to more easily select candidates who meet a range of economic needs and priorities. More specifically, the amendments authorize the Minister of Citizenship and Immigration to invite foreign nationals to apply for permanent residence through express entry on a new basis: the eligibility to be members of a category that would support an economic goal identified by the minister.
Eligibility requirements to be a member of a category would be established by the minister and could be based on factors such as work experience, educational background or language skills. For example, if there was a desire to leverage immigration to support the growth of Canada's tech sector, a category of express entry candidates would be created based on criteria such as their possession of work experience in their sector occupation and/or their possession of a related educational credential. Invitations could then be issued to the top-ranked candidates in that category. The minister would establish the category through ministerial instructions and post details, including the eligibility criteria, on the departmental website.
To support program integrity, the proposed amendments also direct officers to refuse applications from candidates who cannot demonstrate that they were eligible to be a member of the particular category. To support transparency around these authorities, the proposed amendments also require the minister to identify the economic goal they are seeking to support in establishing each category. The amendments also include the requirement for the minister to report on the use of these authorities through the annual report to Parliament on immigration.
Amendments in division 23 also include technical amendments to division 1 of IRPA, notably to eliminate of a minor inconsistency between the English and French versions of division 1 and to clarify the minister's authority to specify to which program an invited applicant may apply in the event they qualify for more than one program.
With respect to amendments regarding fees, the department is seeking an exemption from the Service Fees Act for four fees established under the authority of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act. They are the authorization to return to Canada, rehabilitation for criminality and serious criminality, restoration of temporary resident status and temporary resident permits.
The Service Fees Act received assent in June 2017. It requires that service standards be established for all fees and that fees be remitted to clients when these service standards are not met. Services related to these four fees exist to address an inadmissibility for applicants who may have a criminal record or have been flagged to have special circumstances that prevent them from following the regular temporary residence pathways to enter Canada.
As such, these services have highly variable processing times that are dependent on clients' individual circumstances, and therefore an exemption from the Service Fees Act is being proposed, as it's difficult to establish reasonable and meaningful service standards for these fees.
Thank you for the opportunity to provide you with more information on these proposed amendments, and I look forward to your questions.