Madam Chair, members of the committee, I thank you for having me here today.
I am speaking in my capacity as the general director of L'Hirondelle, Welcoming and Integration Services for Immigrants, a Montreal-based organization that has been helping immigrants for nearly 50 years.
Every year, we help thousands of people to learn French, integrate into society and, most importantly, enter the workforce, thanks to financial support from Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada and Employment and Social Development Canada.
For five decades, we have been a privileged observer of integration. What we are seeing on the ground is a situation that deserves your full attention.
Canada selects immigrants for their skills, experience and economic potential. They go through a demanding and costly process with the legitimate hope of fully contributing to their host society.
However, upon their arrival, many people run up against a brick wall. They find it difficult to get their foreign credentials recognized. Their experience is underestimated and they are asked to provide proof of work experience in Canada, which they have not yet had the opportunity to acquire.
As a result, it is not uncommon, at least in our experience, to see engineers or health care professionals driving taxis. Highly qualified professionals remain underemployed for years. This isn't an individual integration problem. It is a systemic problem related to the use of talent.
Beyond the individual experience, this is actually a major economic issue. Canada is investing to attract talent, but it is losing some of the return on its investment once those people arrive.
From our experience, here are four priorities that warrant attention.
First, the government must recognize that the underutilization of skills works directly against productivity and economic growth. Underutilized talent is a loss for the individual and for the Canadian economy.
Second, the government must accelerate and simplify the recognition of foreign credentials and experience, while further aligning procedures among the provinces to facilitate labour mobility across Canada.
Third, the government must improve access to employment support services. Workforce integration does not happen on its own. It requires support from a professional network and real opportunities from employers. This issue is particularly important in a context of regionalization. From our experience, it is difficult to ask someone who has just been uprooted for the first time to immediately move again. We cannot talk about sustainable regionalization without advance preparation. Establishing connections with employers in the regions earlier, even before newcomers arrive in Canada, can make a huge difference.
We also see that some workers are finding themselves in vulnerable and precarious situations, particularly when the program rules change part way through the process. The instability of these pathways not only leaves individuals in a precarious position, but it also makes Canada less attractive to international applicants.
In this context, the community network plays a vital role. Specialized organizations across the country act as a bridge between talent and employers. We prepare the candidates, support businesses and build real networks. We turn potential into real employment.
Fourth, it is essential to provide better support for employers when it comes to inclusive recruitment and onboarding practices. Onboarding does not end with hiring. It is also about retention.
In closing, Canada does not just have to attract talent. It has to ensure that the talent it welcomes can quickly and fully contribute to society, because the talent is already here. In that regard, we recommend speeding up the recognition of credentials, investing more in job search support and strengthening the bridge between employers and international talent before those individuals arrive in Canada, especially in the case of regionalization.
In our opinion, workforce integration is not an expenditure. It is a strategic investment that enables us to turn human potential into a sustainable lever of economic growth for Canada.
Thank you.