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Media Centre

Press
Releases:
For
Immediate Release
May 24, 2007
Another Conservative Broken Promise on Foreign Credentials
Recognition
OTTAWA – The
Conservative government’s growing list of broken election
promises expanded today with the scrapping of its plan for a
Canadian Agency for Assessment and Recognition of Foreign
Credentials, Liberal Citizenship and Immigration Critic Omar
Alghabra said today.
"With today's announcement, the
Conservative government has broken a key election promise to new
Canadians, converting their proposed foreign credentials agency
into a referral office that will do nothing more than refer new
Canadians to the provincial offices that have always recognized
foreign credentials," said Mr. Alghabra.
"This
referral office
will only duplicate
the work of the In-Canada Portal, which was established by the
previous Liberal government," added Mr. Alghabra.
During the 2006 Election, the
Conservative government promised to “create an agency for the
assessment and recognition of credentials, to provide
pre-assessment of foreign credentials and experience,” but over
a year later have now decided to downgrade this agency to a
referral office at Citizenship and Immigration Canada.
“Even
worse, this announcement is geared only towards potential
immigrants currently outside of Canada. It does absolutely
nothing for the tens of thousands of people who have already
made their way to Canada, many of whom are now citizens, who are
trained but cannot get their credentials recognized,” said Mr.
Alghabra.
Statistics Canada has
recently confirmed that our labour and population growth will
soon depend exclusively on immigration, so ensuring the
successful integration of immigrants is essential for the future
success of Canada.
"The
Conservatives lack of a real plan ignores one of the most
important challenges our country will face in the coming years,"
said Mr. Alghabra. "Unless we can rationalize the process for
recognizing foreign credentials for professions and skilled
labour we run the risk of ongoing labour shortages in critical
areas like healthcare and construction."
In April 2005, the
previous Liberal government announced a commitment of
$263 million to launch the Internationally-Trained Workers
Initiative, to improve the integration of immigrants and
internationally-trained Canadians into the work force. This
plan was an important step in tackling the foreign credential
recognition challenge.
"It is a shame
that this narrow minded Conservative government does not
understand the tremendous opportunity to the Canadian economy
that addressing the foreign credentials recognition challenge
presents," said Mr. Alghabra.
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