Mr. Speaker, I am very pleased to rise today on behalf of the constituents of Newton--North Delta, as well as the Conservative Party of Canada to participate in the debate on Motion No. 195 regarding the development of national qualification standards and the recognition of international credentials.
I congratulate the member for Brampton--Springdale for bringing forth this important motion. As she is relatively new to the chamber she may not realize that I was the first member ever to introduce a motion to develop national qualification standards and recognition of international credentials on the floor of the Canadian Parliament.
My Motion No. 232 was debated in 2001. I had tabled it two other times but I did not get the opportunity to debate it. It was the member's party that refused to support my motion. It was exactly the same motion but the Liberals refused to support it. I wish the hon. member better luck this time.
I have been talking about this issue since I first came to Canada in 1991. Like other newcomers I experienced firsthand the red tape and bureaucratic nonsense of my own degrees not being recognized. I have an honours B.Sc. degree in agriculture and an M.B.A., both from very reputable institutions, but I have suffered the fate which all newcomers face in Canada.
I have talked the ears off of everyone possible, including cabinet ministers. I tabled a private member's motion first in the 36th Parliament and then in the 37th Parliament, yet little has changed since then despite numerous promises by the Liberal government.
For years the government has been dithering on the recognition of international credentials. This has harmed our country and betrayed newcomers who offer skills that Canada needs. Year after year the Liberals promise action on the recognition of foreign credentials but they never do anything to fix the problem.
After defeating my motion, the Liberals realized their mistake. Then they included in their throne speeches that they would recognize foreign credentials. The 2001 throne speech stated:
These strategies commit the government to working in partnership with the provinces and territories and key stakeholders to develop fair, transparent and consistent processes to assess and recognize foreign qualifications before and after the immigrant's arrival.
In the 2002 throne speech there was another promise:
The government will work with its partners to break down the barriers to the recognition of foreign credentials and will fast-track skilled workers entering Canada with jobs already waiting for them.
Then there was another promise. Last October in the Speech from the Throne the government again voiced its intention to implement a program to recognize the international academic credentials of immigrant workers. It stated:
We will also deepen the pool of Canada's talent and skills by ensuring more successful integration of new immigrants into the economy and into communities.... The government will do its part to ensure speedier recognition of foreign credentials and prior work experience.
This follows a long line of unfulfilled promises. The Liberals are starting to sound like a broken record. This begs the question, how many times can they make the same promise without doing anything about it?
Canadians know the government is very good at paying lip service to problems, but it is terrible at delivering the goods. Promises made but never kept. New Canadians are not interested in more empty promises. They want jobs in their chosen professions, professions for which they are qualified, trained and experienced.
I remember one time in my constituency office there were six persons with Ph.D.s sitting together. They had come to lobby on this issue. All of them were underemployed and were doing menial jobs.
I remember one person in particular who had two doctorate degrees in environmental sciences, one from Germany and one from India. He had over 20 years of experience as a professor and scientist and he had written 43 research papers in reputable international journals.
He attended promotional seminars put on by CIC and HRDC in India to lure professionals to come to Canada. He applied under the “independent” category. His degrees fetched him the required points and he was granted immigration very quickly. He resigned from his prestigious job. However, once he arrived in Canada he felt that he had been duped. His degrees had already been recognized by Citizenship and Immigration Canada but they were not recognized in Canada, even by HRDC, Agriculture Canada, Health Canada and Environment Canada, because there is no coordination in different departments of the government.
He almost went crazy while working to support his family by, guess what, pumping gas at a gas station. This is a person with two Ph.D.s and so much experience and great repute. Other frustrated professionals told similar stories. Some are driving cabs and others are doing clerical work or even janitorial jobs.
When arguing that foreign credentials should be recognized, we are not talking about lowering standards in Canada. We are talking about some common sense.
The portability and recognition of skills and credentials are being addressed on a global basis. The governments of European states are already introducing mechanisms to make it easier for professionals to move from one country to another. The Canadian government should take this work seriously, assume leadership in this important area and keep up with the rest of the world so that we are not left behind.
More than 60% of new immigrants to Canada have earned post-secondary degrees in their native countries. Nearly half are trained in regulated industries, such as medicine, engineering and so on.
According to a study conducted by the Conference Board of Canada, more than 500,000 immigrants are working at jobs beneath their education levels because Canadian institutions and corporations will not recognize their degrees from foreign universities. It found that 23% of immigrants could not practise their profession and 49%, almost half of them, found that their foreign credentials affected their ability to get a better job for which they were professionally qualified.
Improved recognition of credentials could add 83,000 post-secondary degree holders to the existing talent pool. Allowing these skilled immigrants to participate fully in the workforce could improve Canada's performance on innovation and productivity.
Canada must consider creating a common framework for valuing, learning, establishing national standards, improving transfer mechanisms and institutional linkages, both in Canada and internationally
If people do not hold degrees from Canadian institutions, I think they cannot become members of Canadian professional groups. They are denied jobs in their field of expertise.
We know that four million people in this country do not have a family doctor. Meanwhile, foreign trained doctors are forced to sit idle. This is outrageous.
Prominent countries are competing for skilled workers, IT workers, for example. However, when those professionally qualified people arrive in Canada, we do not take care of them. What will happen is they will go to other countries.
There are certain countries in the world that do not have the natural resources that Canada is blessed with. They do not have many other things. What they simply have is a skilful pool of human beings. In countries like Taiwan, people are highly skilled. Those countries do not have natural resources, but they are dominating in many areas.
Similarly, there is a need for us to address the situation of coordinating the standards in Canada. If someone has a diploma in dental surgery from one province, the person cannot practise in the other provinces. It is similar for real estate agents.
In a nutshell, the Conservative Party of Canada believes in providing new immigrants with the best possible opportunity to use their education and experience here in Canada so that they can integrate better into Canadian society. We see this as a matter of fairness to newcomers and their families and a means of ensuring that Canada receives the full benefit of immigration.
Currently, federal government efforts on the issue of foreign credentials are too vague and superficial, just empty promises. The interdepartmental working group encompasses 14 departments but they are not working in coordination.
Therefore, Conservative proposals in this area will require a centralized structure to ensure their proper and efficient implementation. Motion No. 195 is worthy of our support. I encourage all members to support this motion and pray that the government will finally get its priorities in order and take immediate steps to facilitate the recognition of foreign academic credentials.