Madam Speaker, it is a pleasure to be able to speak on the subject of immigration for the second time today.
I am going to be taking another side to this debate. I should point out this House has not been active in the promotion or discussion of legislation dealing with immigration and I applaud my hon. colleague for breaking ground.
Our current Immigration Act despite its enormous length has the appearance of having no teeth as its enforcement is sorely lacking. This also applies in the area of visitor visas. In the minds of many Canadians it fails to ensure that Canada is adequately protected from abuse.
Canada needless to say is a nation with a sterling reputation for compassion and openness. However when that openness is abused the result can be a backlash and a decline in Canadians' tolerance for newcomers or even more so directed toward the legislation that does not seem to fit the abuse. Polls indicate that this is precisely what is happening now.
Canadians see example after example of abuse in the system. They fail to see that immigrants are not to blame per se since those immigrants or visitors who are abusing the system are only taking advantage of the incentives for abuse that our present immigration law provides.
One area of abuse that may not make the headlines frequently but that is nevertheless a growing strain on our immigration system is the failure of many to leave the country after the expiration of their visitor visas. As a result of this abuse, immigration officials have been tightening up the requirements needed for visitors to enter Canada on visitor visas.
Currently one of the determining factors in whether or not a visitor visa will be granted to an applicant is if the applicant poses a risk for non-compliance with the terms of departure from Canada. This security is especially hard on young males and unattached people who it is often determined may have little reason to return to their native land. This is especially so when Canadian immigration is unable in most cases to undertake the process of apprehension and deportation of people who have overstayed their visas.
However if family members who are citizens or permanent residents of Canada were able to post a bond and the posting of that bond were allowed to influence the decision making of the immigration official, then not only would the possibility of overstaying be reduced but so would the likelihood of unjust rejection for visitor visas. At least that is how it should work in theory.
In reality however this legislation may have the effect of actually encouraging more abuse of the system. This legislation if passed, may result in even more people coming to Canada with no intention of leaving and then staying on without ever being apprehended. Allow me to explain why.
This bill makes no mention of the size or the type of bond, whether it is cash or security. Therefore we must assume that the bond will not be overly sizeable. If that is the case then citizens or permanent residents of Canada who desire to bring to Canada a family member may well end up making a rational, economic decision to buy a family member into Canada using a bonded visitor visa rather than going through the long and complicated process of sponsoring under the family class.
Further, when one sponsors a relative there is an obligation to support the individual for a lengthy period of time. I know this requirement has been ignored by many and is also rife with abuse. Nonetheless it is a requirement that presents an obligation which could be enforced, if this government would only demonstrate the political will necessary to enforce it and to support its enforcement officers and divisions.
Were one to sponsor a visitor visa by posting a bond, there could be at most the loss of a couple of thousand dollars. No further financial or more important, legal obligation would be pending. Instead of accomplishing what this bill on its face seems to, this bill would in fact open the doors for further abuse.
I have brought the text of this bill to the attention of individuals with far more knowledge than I possess in the field of immigration. After review, the response I received from them was that while this bill could help to make the visa process somewhat less discriminatory, the price could very well be a flood of visitors who intend to take up residence in Canada by overstaying those visas.
Furthermore I was told that it is virtually impossible due to manpower shortages and legal limitations to track down, apprehend and deport illegals who have overstayed their visas. A huge percentage of illegal immigrants to Canada have used this route to enter the country. This legislation, by making the process of acquiring a visitor visa easier for those individuals who pose a high flight risk could make the number of illegals that much higher.
Further this legislation could make it impossible to charge a citizen or permanent resident of Canada with aiding or harbouring an illegal immigrant. After all if one has posted a bond and then forfeited the funds then legal recourse may be exhausted.
There is also the issue of fraud to consider. Fraud permeates the immigration process in Canada in the form of faulty travel documents, falsified visas and the transfer of documents. It is regrettable that this bill does not address this issue. Rather this bill seeks to make the acquisition of visas even easier and ignores the rampant abuse of the visitor visa system that currently exists.
One other point should be made regarding this bill. This bill assumes there is some mechanism to determine if and when a visitor on a visa leaves the country. How else could the forfeiture of a bond occur? However there is no such process. While visa visitors do have their date of entry logged with Immigration Canada, their date of departure is not. Thus this bill is premised upon an enforcement mechanism which by all rights should exist but does not.
In short, I applaud my hon. colleague for having introduced this bill and to attempt the beginnings of a badly needed restructuring of immigration law. However this bill is shortsighted and suffers from the same malady that reflects so much of the legislation that comes into this House.
In theory we have a good idea here. I know the intentions of my colleague are laudable, but this bill would make a presently existing problem even worse. To make our immigration system function any worse than it does now would be to be jeopardize the future of all immigration into Canada by further raising the level of intolerance that this failed system has begun to create.
I respectfully oppose this bill.