Thank you very much, Madam Chair.
First of all, I would like to express my deep appreciation for the honour and privilege to be part of this very important discussion, especially to MP Salma Zahid, who has been helping us for very long years.
As a witness in this august body, I will focus on the topic of immigration levels, though I believe it is impossible to speak meaningfully about levels without also considering the immigration process. These two are inseparable, and addressing them together will strengthen the position I put forward today.
One of the most prominent changes in the 2025-27 immigration levels plan is a reduction in overall immigration targets. The hashtag “in-Canada focus” highlights the government's intent to prioritize immigrants already working in Canada under temporary permits, offering them a clearer pathway to permanent residency, but this raises a critical question: Should we be lowering immigration levels, or should we be fixing the system itself?
Let me illustrate this with the case of caregiving.
Caregivers play a unique and essential role in Canadian society, yet under the home care worker immigration pilot, the cap is set at just 2,750 applications each for child care and home support.
As of September 2025, there were 34,000 applications across all caregiver programs. From January to December, IRCC processed only 4,200 applications. With a processing rate of only 14%, they will manage to process just another 4,816 applications this year. Meanwhile, the cap for the home care worker immigration pilot remains at 5,500 applications in total.
With such limited processing capacity, thousands of in-Canada caregivers' applications will remain in limbo. This plan negatively impacts caregivers not only because of the low cap but also because Canada's need for caregivers continues to grow. Restrictive immigration levels and slow processing exacerbate existing problems.
Many caregivers are forced to remain with abusive employers, enduring exploitation simply because their status is tied to their job. The backlog is massive and the narrow window of opportunity worsens the situation.
Caregivers are not just workers. They are the backbone of Canada's social support system, saving the government billions in social services. They enable families to thrive, allow parents to fully participate in the workplace and ensure seniors live with dignity. Their contributions strengthen both Canada's economy and its social fabric.
I submit to you that the immigration limit and caregiver cap are far too low, and I say this for several reasons.
One is the human impact. Caregivers endure years of family separation, exploitation and abuse because of limited chances for permanent residency.
Another reason is labour market needs. Canada faces a persistent shortage. Many caregivers are skilled professionals whose education and expertise could benefit our economy if given a chance to transition to permanent residency.
A third reason is policy alignment. Increasing immigration levels for caregivers is aligned with the government's stated priority of transitioning competent temporary foreign workers already in Canada to permanent residency.
Fourth is the fact that there are systemic challenges. The low cap creates a bottleneck. Caregivers lose status and face financial hardship, and employers are burdened with costly LMIA requirements.
Processing delays make permanent residency feel like passing through the eye of a needle. It is noteworthy that Canada's 2025 immigration plan emphasizes two key features: an in-Canada focus and family reunification.
If there is one group of workers who deserve fair allocation under these priorities, it is the caregivers, those who have been in Canada the longest and have contributed immensely to our society and economy yet remain hostage to an elusive dream of permanent residency.
Their prolonged family separation undermines the very pillar of our immigration system: family reunification. As the legal dictums remind us, justice delayed is justice denied.
Colleagues, by increasing immigration levels for caregivers and improving operational capacity and processing times, we can move towards an immigration system that is not only fair and humane but also effective in meeting Canada's labour and development needs.
It is not just about numbers. It is about people, it is about fairness and it is about building a Canada that truly values the contributions of those who care for our children, our elderly and our most vulnerable.
I therefore respectfully urge your reconsideration of the tightened immigration levels. Canada cannot afford to lose these talents and skills, especially in the face of the constant economic and trade challenges it faces. On the contrary, we need a strong and reliable labour force. By supporting caregivers, we secure not only our labour market but also the very strength of our economy and society.