I've been to enough church basements, including over Thanksgiving, to know now that many of these CUAET visa holders don't have enough points for express entry. Many of them have been given bad information by IRCC, by lawyers or by immigration consultants, and they're struggling. They don't have their certifications. Their licences aren't recognized in Canada. Many of them are struggling to get survival jobs. The cost of living is immense. I met a mother with her 18-year-old son here. They are earning $2,800 a month and paying $2,4000 a month in rent. They're just making it, but the son can't go to school. He has to work as well just so that they can get by.
We have a program for those who have connections, who have family members here. For the rest of them, is the government going to look for more information and reach out to different Ukrainian organizations? This is a group of people who have fled, sometimes with absolutely nothing. They left their homes. Many of their homes have been destroyed by the Russian army. They have no village, nowhere to go back to, and unlike those in Europe who have expressed an interest in going back, the ones in Canada have said they would like to stay. What does the path to permanent residency look like for them in the department? Don't say there's a “whole-of-government approach”, because every time that's said, I cringe—