Canada Gazette, Part I, Volume 155, Number 28: Regulations Amending the Immigration and Refugee Protection Regulations (Temporary Foreign Workers)

July 10, 2021

Statutory authority
Immigration and Refugee Protection Act

Sponsoring department
Department of Citizenship and Immigration

REGULATORY IMPACT ANALYSIS STATEMENT

(This statement is not part of the Regulations.)

Executive summary

Issues: While temporary foreign workers have the same workplace protections and rights as Canadians and permanent residents under applicable federal, provincial and territorial legislation, there are several factors, such as their temporary status and their limited access to information on their rights, that can make them more vulnerable to potential exploitation and abuse. While the Government of Canada has made progress in enhancing protections for temporary foreign workers through the employer compliance regimes found in the Temporary Foreign Worker Program (TFWP) and the International Mobility Program (IMP), consultations and inspections have found that there remain gaps in worker protection.

Description: The TFWP and the IMP set the requirements and conditions for Canadian employers to hire temporary foreign workers. The proposed amendments to the Immigration and Refugee Protection Regulations would enhance the protection of temporary foreign workers by setting new employer requirements and conditions and improving the ability to hold employers accountable for non-compliance. This includes requirements for an employer to provide the most recent information to workers about their rights in Canada, have a signed employment agreement with their workers, and provide access to health care services when the worker is injured or becomes ill at the workplace. The proposal would also mandate that employers in the TFWP obtain and pay for private health insurance that covers the fees of emergency medical care for their workers, if the worker is not already covered. In addition, the proposed amendments would expand the definition of “abuse” to include reprisal against a temporary foreign worker and prohibit employers from charging or recovering recruitment fees.

The proposed amendments would provide the Minister of Employment and Social Development Canada (ESDC) and Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) officers with the authority to require documents from third parties to verify employer compliance, reduce timelines for an employer to respond to notices of preliminary findings, and create new requirements for Labour Market Impact Assessments (LMIAs). The proposed amendments would also clarify the authority for ESDC to collect information related to employer compliance with regulatory conditions under the IMP and would clarify certain provisions to ensure employers’ compliance with provincial and territorial employment and recruitment laws, including those relating specifically to foreign nationals.

Rationale: The proposed amendments will address existing gaps in worker protections and strengthen program integrity, as identified by the 2016 report of the Standing Committee on Human Resources, Skills and Social Development and the Status of Persons with Disabilities (HUMA), by enhancing the employer compliance regimes of both programs and the LMIA process. Some of the proposed amendments expand existing program policies. Overall, the regulatory amendments are expected to improve worker and employer awareness and to provide stronger worker protection, resulting in greater employer compliance.

The total costs for the regulatory proposals are estimated at $37,677,828 in present value (PV) over the period of 2021 to 2030. These costs reflect transition and ongoing costs to the Government of Canada, as well as costs for employers to provide the most recent information to temporary foreign workers about their rights in Canada, administrative costs associated with undertakings and attestations, and costs of providing private health insurance to cover the fees of emergency medical care to temporary foreign workers for any period during which they are not covered by the provincial system. Total benefits are estimated at $30,523,418 PV over the period of 2021 to 2030 and represent the benefits to temporary foreign workers from employer-provided private health insurance for emergency medical care, and obtaining the most recent information about their rights in Canada in a timelier manner. There are also many qualitative benefits of the proposal, as the enhancement of temporary foreign worker protections would prevent potential mistreatment or abuse, as well as improve the employer compliance regimes and LMIA processes. Strengthening workplace conditions for temporary foreign workers positively affects workplace conditions for all Canadians and permanent residents, as workplaces tend to be shared environments.

Issues

The success and continued growth of the Canadian economy depends on a number of factors, including the contributions of temporary foreign workers. Temporary foreign workers have the same workplace protections and rights as Canadians and permanent residents under applicable federal, provincial, and territorial legislation. However, restrictions and limitations concerning their employment can make them more vulnerable to exploitation and abuse by employers and recruiters. Language barriers, social and physical isolation resulting from the location of work, a lack of knowledge about their rights, and the fear of reprisal are among the factors heightening the vulnerability of temporary foreign workers.

The Government of Canada has made progress in enhancing protections for temporary foreign workers through the employer compliance regimes of the Temporary Foreign Worker Program (TFWP) and the International Mobility Program (IMP). Employers under these programs are expected to meet certain requirements and conditions to ensure the protection of temporary foreign workers. Compliance with the conditions is verified by conducting inspections, and employers who fail to comply can be subject to a range of consequences. Inspections also serve as a way to improve employer awareness of their regulatory obligations under the Immigration and Refugee Protection Regulations (IRPR).

However, reports, consultations, and inspections have shown a need for further improvements to better protect temporary foreign workers’ rights in Canada, and to strengthen the employer compliance regimes to ensure that employers comply with their applicable program rules. Maintaining the status quo would leave temporary foreign workers at risk of exploitation and create further vulnerabilities.

Temporary foreign worker protections

In general, temporary foreign workers are not well informed about their rights in Canada, which could lead to them not having adequate information about their wages and working conditions. It has been identified that temporary foreign workers require better information about their rights, better health and safety protections, protection from reprisal should they come forward with a complaint, and protection from an employer (or employment recruiter) who charges them recruitment fees.

Existing TFWP policy requires that an employment agreement be provided so that workers understand their rights and obligations and prohibits employers from charging or recovering recruitment-related fees to foreign workers, which is also illegal in most provinces. As these requirements exist only in TFWP policy and do not apply to the IMP, there is a need to strengthen and harmonize the approaches.

It has been reported that in some instances, temporary foreign workers have had difficulty accessing emergency health care services because of isolated locations and lack of information. In addition, temporary foreign workers are not always covered by provincial health insurance systems when they enter Canada, as there is a waiting period in some provinces. Existing TFWP policy requires employers to obtain and pay for private health insurance for any period the temporary foreign worker is not covered by provincial or territorial (P/T) health insurance, aside from those workers in the global talent and high-wage streams and those already covered through the Seasonal Agriculture Worker Program. Lack of coverage adds vulnerability for temporary foreign workers, as they would have to pay out of pocket for any emergency medical expenses, putting them at financial risk.

Further concerns have been identified where workers are afraid to report potential wrongful actions by their employer (including incorrect wages or threats of deportation) to the Government, even with tools such as the Service Canada Confidential Tip Line, where workers can anonymously provide tips and messages to ESDC or IRCC about employers. Current regulatory conditions exist to ensure employers make reasonable efforts to provide a workplace that is free of abuse. However, temporary foreign workers have expressed fear that employers will take action against them if they report the employer non-compliance or cooperate with inspections.

Program integrity

The TFWP and the IMP have employer compliance regimes that hold employers accountable for non-compliance. However, the regimes have some integrity gaps and enhancements are needed.

Challenges have been identified when obtaining corroborating information to address discrepancies found in pay information provided by an employer, and the current timelines provided to the employer to take corrective action (such as paying workers the correct wage) may delay workers from receiving associated benefits.

In addition, stronger employer assessment measures are needed to protect those temporary foreign workers who may be at risk of abuse. The TFWP has identified instances where an employer may have affiliations with another employer no longer eligible for the program. The TFWP is also aware of cases where employers were able to participate in the TFWP despite it being demonstrated in their LMIA request that the wages set out in the offer of employment were not consistent with the prevailing wage rate for the occupation, or where employment of the foreign worker was likely to adversely affect the settlement of a labour dispute.

For a returning employer submitting a new LMIA request, ESDC typically processes and issues their LMIA even if there is a reason to suspect that the employer is not meeting program conditions, and even though an inspection to verify employer compliance has not been completed. This could potentially place a foreign worker in a precarious situation.

Alignment and technical amendments

As provinces and territories enact laws regarding employers of temporary foreign workers specifically, both the TFWP and the IMP need to ensure alignment with P/T laws that regulate the employment or recruitment of foreign workers. The IRPR also include some outdated provisions with respect to employer compliance reviews (ECRs) that are no longer in use. The Standing Joint Committee for the Scrutiny of Regulations has also raised some inconsistencies between the English and French versions of amendments made in April 2020 (SOR/2020-91) to sections of the IRPR regarding workers.

Background

Temporary Foreign Worker Program and International Mobility Program

Employers in Canada seeking to hire temporary foreign workers can do so via the TFWP, administered by ESDC, or through the IMP, administered by IRCC. These distinct programs reflect different objectives in bringing temporary foreign workers to Canada. The TFWP seeks to address labour and skills shortages by helping employers fulfill their labour requirements on a temporary basis when they are unable to find a Canadian or permanent resident to fill the position. By contrast, the primary objective of the IMP is to advance Canada’s broader social, cultural, and economic interests and competitive advantage. Under the IMP, there is no obligation for the employer to demonstrate that no Canadian or permanent resident was available before hiring a temporary foreign worker.

Under the Immigration and Refugee Protection Regulations (IRPR), in most cases, a temporary foreign worker must successfully obtain a work permit under the TFWP or the IMP. The key distinction between the programs is whether employers are required to obtain a request for a Labour Market Impact Assessment (LMIA), which assesses whether a Canadian or a permanent resident is available to do the work and the likely effect of the employment of the temporary foreign worker on the Canadian labour market. While the TFWP requires an LMIA, the IMP does not. The IMP instead assesses the broader economic, social, or cultural benefits the worker will bring to Canada by virtue of their employment. The TFWP has a variety of occupations under the following streams: primary agriculture, low-wage, high-wage, and global talent. The TFWP predominately includes farm workers and food processors. Workers under the IMP commonly include those whose work is facilitated by an international or bilateral agreement or arrangement, youth taking part in working holiday exchanges, post-graduate students, employees transferred within a company, certain academics, and charitable and religious workers.

All work permits issued under the TFWP are employer-specific, whereas work permits issued under the IMP can be either employer-specific or open. Employer-specific work permits limit temporary foreign workers to work only for the employer named on their work permit, and the inspection regimes are linked to the specific employer named on the permit in order to be able to hold the employer accountable for program conditions. By contrast, temporary foreign workers with open work permits can work for any employer in any region in Canada. Employers who hire temporary foreign workers on open work permits are not subject to the compliance regime. In 2019, approximately 400 000 temporary foreign workers were issued work permits. Of these, about 188 000 held an employer-specific work permit (98 000 in the TFWP and 90 000 in the IMP) and the remaining 212 000 held open work permits through the IMP.

Program integrity

IRCC and ESDC are committed to protecting foreign nationals who come to Canada to work, and key worker protection through employer compliance regimes is built into both the TFWP and the IMP. Both departments inspect employers to verify compliance with regulatory conditions, such as ensuring employers are paying the temporary foreign worker the correct wages. The objectives of these inspections are to enhance program integrity, protect the Canadian labour market, ensure the protection of temporary foreign workers, and educate employers of temporary foreign workers about their regulatory obligations under the IRPR. Employers who are non-compliant with the regulatory conditions may be subject to consequences, which include warning letters, administrative monetary penalties (AMPs), and temporary or permanent ineligibility to access the programs. Factors such as previous non-compliance, the size of the employer, and the severity of the violation are considered when assessing the consequences. The violation of conditions is classified as Type A, B, or C depending on the severity of the impact of the violation, with Type C being the strongest classification.

The IRPR provide for several triggers that initiate an employer inspection: a reason to suspect non-compliance (e.g. a complaint or tip was received), a history of non-compliance, or random selection. Inspections can entail document review and verification, on-site visits, employer interviews, and temporary foreign worker or other interviews (with consent only). Amendments made in response to COVID-19 included two new triggers for inspection: if there is notification of the introduction or spread of a communicable disease at the workplace and if the employer employs a temporary foreign worker who is, or was, subject to an order or regulation made under the Quarantine Act or the Emergencies Act.

The compliance regimes for both programs have mechanisms in place to ensure procedural fairness for employers. If potential non-compliance is identified during an inspection, employers are given a formal opportunity to provide additional information to demonstrate their compliance or to justify instances of non-compliance with program conditions. Reasons an employer may use to justify their non-compliance, such as a change in federal or provincial law or an accounting error, are identified in the IRPR.

Once a final decision is rendered, the employer can accept the decision and be bound by it or challenge the decision by submitting an application with the Federal Court seeking its leave to have the decision judicially reviewed.

Since 2015, the results of employer inspections, the findings of the 2016 report of the Standing Committee on Human Resources, Skills and Social Development and the Status of Persons with Disabilities (HUMA), and information gathered during stakeholder consultations, particularly those with temporary foreign workers, have identified gaps in the employer compliance regimes’ ability to protect temporary foreign workers. HUMA held five public meetings, heard from 47 witnesses and received a total of 63 briefs. HUMA noted that program reforms — which included the implementation of the Service Canada Confidential Tip Line to report abuse, more frequent inspections, and larger consequences for non-compliance — have helped to encourage employer compliance with program requirements and conditions, and thus protect temporary foreign workers, but gaps remain.

Between 2016 and 2020, the TFWP received over 300 tips of allegations of abuse and mistreatment through the Service Canada Confidential Tip Line. Stakeholders, such as worker advocacy groups and temporary foreign workers, indicate that temporary foreign workers are reluctant to report abuse out of fear of losing their jobs and that they do not always understand their rights in Canada. A series of stakeholder consultations with temporary foreign workers, support organizations, and consulate liaison officers in 2017 revealed that language barriers and access to information on rights and protections remain serious impediments to worker protections, as does the fear of employer reprisal and deportation in response to speaking out or reporting mistreatment or poor working conditions. Instances of workers being improperly charged recruitment and other fees were also highlighted as a particular area of concern. Abuse, exploitation, and mistreatment of temporary foreign workers has also been widely discussed in the national media, with more than 4 150 articles addressing this topic between August 2019 and May 2021.

The 2016 HUMA report made a number of recommendations regarding temporary foreign worker protections, such as directing the Government to review current monitoring and enforcement mechanisms and to address gaps in employer compliance and worker protection. Specific recommendations include guaranteeing that temporary foreign workers who receive workplace injuries requiring immediate attention be provided with emergency care, and establishing measures to inform temporary foreign workers of their rights, including information on wages, benefits, and working conditions.

The Government responded to HUMA’s recommendations and recognized that further measures should be adopted to prevent vulnerable temporary foreign workers from experiencing mistreatment, abuse, and unsafe working conditions while working in Canada. For this reason, the February 2017 mandate letters for the Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship and the Minister of Employment, Workforce Development and Labour included commitments to work together with stakeholders to act on the recommendations of the HUMA report on the TFWP.

In April 2020, as a response to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Government enacted new regulations to ensure temporary foreign workers were better protected (SOR/2020-91). The September 2020 Speech from the Throne and the ministerial mandate letters for IRCC and ESDC reinforced the Government’s commitment to fully support and protect vulnerable temporary foreign workers. In addition, Budget 2021 announced funding for ESDC to support community-based organizations in the provision of temporary foreign worker-centric programs and services, such as on-arrival orientation services and assistance in emergency and at-risk situations. Funding was also announced for ESDC to increase inspections of employers under the TFWP and for IRCC, which supports ESDC with such inspections, to ensure temporary foreign workers have appropriate working conditions and wages.

Objective

The primary objective of the proposed amendments to the Immigration and Refugee Protection Regulations (IRPR) is to strengthen protections for temporary foreign workers to prevent potential mistreatment or abuse during their period of employment in Canada. These proposed amendments would impose on employers additional requirements, as well as conditions that the Government would be able to inspect and verify, and would address program integrity gaps. Specific amendments are proposed to directly address issues identified during stakeholder consultations, the report of the Standing Committee on HUMA, and ministerial mandate commitments. The proposal also builds on TFWP policies.

Temporary foreign worker protections

Temporary Foreign Worker Program and International Mobility Program

A number of the proposed amendments would directly improve worker protections by ensuring that temporary foreign workers have access to sources of information about their jobs and their rights in Canada. These include requiring that an employer provide the worker with a signed employment agreement that outlines the occupation, wages, and working conditions consistent with those set out in the offer of employment and, as recommended by HUMA, requiring that the employer provide workers with the most recent information about their rights in Canada. Further amendments would help address particular areas of vulnerability by prohibiting the charging or recovering of fees related to recruitment of the temporary foreign worker, and by requiring reasonable access to health care services when a temporary foreign worker is injured or becomes ill at the workplace.

A number of these requirements and conditions have previously been developed and expanded on through various program policies; however, having them incorporated in regulation would strengthen and harmonize both programs.

Employers are required to make efforts to provide a workplace that is free from abuse. The proposed amendments would also add “reprisal” to the definition of “abuse” to respond to stakeholder concerns of workers fearing reprisal from employers (such as actual or threats of demotion, disciplinary measures or dismissal) should they report instances of an employer’s non-compliance with program conditions.

TFWP only

Unless otherwise offered, some employers in the TFWP are required through TFWP policy to provide and pay for private health insurance for any period during which the temporary foreign worker is not covered by the applicable provincial or territorial (P/T) health insurance system. This proposal would build on existing TFWP policy to ensure that temporary foreign workers have private health insurance for emergency medical care for any period that the temporary foreign worker is not covered by the applicable P/T health insurance system.

Program integrity

The proposed amendments would improve the employer compliance regimes of both programs by strengthening the Government’s tools necessary to ensuring that employers are complying with the requirements and conditions of the programs.

TFWP and IMP

The proposal would provide ESDC and IRCC with the authority to require documents from third parties (such as banks and payroll companies) to verify employer compliance with the regulatory conditions, such as those relating to a temporary foreign worker’s wages.

TFWP only

The Labour Market Impact Assessment (LMIA) process under the TFWP would be strengthened to ensure that all employers applying for an LMIA meet program requirements in order to prevent a temporary foreign worker from entering an abusive workplace situation. Employers who have not used the TFWP in the preceding six years would be assessed under additional requirements when applying for the LMIA, including that they cannot be affiliated with any employer that is ineligible to participate in the program.

In addition, the proposed amendments would ensure that the processing of an LMIA would be suspended where there is reason to suspect that a returning employer is not complying with certain program conditions, until the conclusion of an inspection or until there is no longer a reason to suspect non-compliance. They would also make wage and labour dispute factors stand-alone requirements an employer must meet to receive a positive LMIA.

IMP only

An additional amendment would confirm ESDC’s authority to collect information regarding compliance with IMP conditions.

Alignment and technical amendments

The regulatory requirement and condition that employers must comply with provincial and territorial employment and recruitment laws would be clarified to include reference to laws specifically related to temporary foreign workers. The proposed amendments would also include technical amendments to ensure harmonization between the French and English versions of the IRPR and would remove the authority to conduct employer compliance reviews (ECRs), which are no longer being used.

Description

The regulatory amendments to the TFWP and the IMP would meet the objectives stated above for strengthening protections for temporary foreign workers in Canada and improving the employer compliance regimes of both the TFWP and the IMP.

Temporary foreign worker protections

1.1 Providing information to temporary foreign workers about their rights in Canada

To help ensure temporary foreign workers are better informed about their rights in Canada, an employer would be required to provide a paper copy of information to the foreign national they employ about their rights in Canada. On the first day of work, the employer would provide, in the worker’s preferred official language of Canada, the most recent version of information supplied by the Government of Canada. The employer would also be required to post this information in an accessible location at the workplace of the temporary foreign worker throughout their period of employment.

A determination of non-compliance with this condition would be considered a Type B violation.

1.2 Providing an employment agreement to the temporary foreign worker

The proposed amendments would ensure that IRCC, ESDC and the temporary foreign worker all have the same information regarding the conditions of employment.

The proposal would require TFWP employers, in their LMIA submission, to commit to conclude an employment agreement with the temporary foreign worker and to provide them with a copy before the beginning of the period of employment. For IMP, employers would be required to attest (on the Employer Portal when providing the offer of employment to IRCC) that they have already provided the temporary foreign worker with an employment agreement.

In both programs, the employment agreement must provide for employment in the same occupation, with the same wages and working conditions as those set out in the offer of employment. The employment agreement should be drafted in the temporary foreign worker’s preferred official language of Canada and be signed by both the employer and the temporary foreign worker. This amendment is expected to improve the temporary foreign worker’s understanding of their wages and the work they will be performing.

Failure to do this would result in a determination of non-compliance with the condition to demonstrate that the information provided by the employer prior to the period of employment was accurate and would be considered a Type A violation.

1.3 Amending the definition of “abuse” to include “reprisal” against temporary foreign workers

Employers are currently obligated to comply with the existing regulatory condition to make reasonable efforts to provide temporary foreign workers with a workplace free of abuse. The proposal would update the definition of “abuse” to include a direct reference to “reprisal.”

As is currently the case for a finding of abuse, a determination of non-compliance with this condition would be considered a Type C violation.

1.4 Prohibit employers from charging or recovering fees for the provision of services in relation to an LMIA, employer compliance fee and recruitment fees and require that employers ensure that any recruiters they use do not charge these fees

This amendment would address the principle that temporary foreign workers should not be paying for their recruitment and mitigate concerns about financial exploitation of temporary foreign workers. This amendment would exclude the fees related to temporary visas, temporary resident permits and work permits, as workers are expected to pay those fees.

a. Prior to the period of employment

Employers under the TFWP would need to confirm and commit in their LMIA submission that they have not and will not directly or indirectly charge or recover fees from a foreign national in relation to the LMIA and their recruitment. Employers would also have to ensure that any third-party recruiter acting on their behalf has not done so and will not do so.

Employers under the IMP would need to attest (on the Employer Portal), that neither they nor any third party they have used have charged or recovered any fees related to the employer compliance fee or recruitment.

Failure to do this would result in a determination of non-compliance with the condition to demonstrate that the information provided by the employer prior to the period of employment was accurate and would be considered a Type A violation.

b. During the period of employment

This amendment would add conditions for employers regarding the charging and recovering of fees from temporary foreign workers during their period of employment. It would prohibit employers from charging or recovering from temporary foreign workers fees paid by the employer for the recruitment of the temporary foreign worker, the IMP employer compliance fee and the LMIA fee. In addition, employers would have to ensure that any person who recruited the temporary foreign worker on their behalf does not directly or indirectly charge or recover these fees from the temporary foreign worker.

A determination of non-compliance with this condition would be considered a Type C violation.

An employer would be able to justify a failure to comply with these conditions if they made all reasonable efforts to comply with them and if they subsequently provided full compensation to the temporary foreign worker for the fees that were incorrectly charged or recovered.

1.5 Protecting the health and safety of temporary foreign workers

a. Access to health care services

This amendment would impose a new condition on all employers, under both the TFWP and the IMP, to make reasonable efforts to provide access to health care services when the temporary foreign worker is injured or becomes ill at the workplace. This may include, for example, ensuring there is a phone available to the temporary foreign workers to call emergency services and/or organizing but not paying for transportation to a hospital, clinic, doctor, or other health care services and providers.

b. Private health insurance for emergency medical care (TFWP only)

This amendment would also impose a new condition on employers in the TFWP to obtain and pay for private health insurance that covers the fees of emergency medical care for the temporary foreign worker for any period during the period of employment for which the temporary foreign worker is not covered by the applicable provincial/territorial (P/T) health insurance system. This condition would be imposed on all TFWP employers, except in the case of employers who employ a foreign worker under an international agreement reached between Canada and one or more countries concerning seasonal agricultural workers, where the agreement includes health insurance.

This amendment is to address the concern that foreign nationals do not always have access to P/T health insurance, as access varies from one province to the other and, for some provinces, there is a waiting period before foreign nationals have coverage. Currently, only certain employers in the TFWP are required to provide private health insurance for emergency medical care for any period during which the foreign national is not covered by the applicable P/T health insurance system. If a foreign national is injured during that period, it puts the foreign national without private health insurance in a potentially vulnerable position, faced with having to choose to either pay out-of-pocket for emergency medical care fees or to refuse necessary care due to concerns about costs.

A determination of non-compliance with either of these conditions would be considered a Type C violation.

Program integrity

Amendments applicable to TFWP and IMP

2.1. Requiring documents from third parties

To help support an employer inspection, this amendment would provide ESDC and IRCC with the authority to require, without the consent of the employer and/or worker, that any third party provide any document in their possession that relates to employer compliance with regulatory conditions. Third parties include entities such as banks and payroll companies. IRCC and ESDC would continue to adhere to the Privacy Act and to the privacy requirements in their respective legislation by collecting only the information that is necessary for the intended authorized purpose, which is to support the inspection process and verify employer compliance, particularly in instances where the employer is uncooperative with the inspection.

2.2. Reducing timelines to respond to notices of preliminary findings

A notice of preliminary findings (NoPF) is sent to an employer when an officer has determined that an employer is non-compliant with one or more conditions, and the employer is given an opportunity to justify or provide more information regarding their compliance with the regulatory conditions before the findings are finalized. This amendment would reduce the time frame for employers to respond to a NoPF from 30 days to 15 days. A reduced time to respond to the NoPF could result in addressing and resolving violations more quickly, such as those related to unpaid wages. By the NoPF stage, there have already been several communications or exchanges between the officer and the employer, meaning that the employer does have advance notice of the type of information, documents, and records that would be required to respond. Flexibility would also remain for employers to request extensions to respond, and officers can determine, on a case-by-case basis (such as cases with severe consequences for employers), if employers should be provided additional time to provide submissions at the NoPF stage.

Amendments applicable to the TFWP only

2.3. Suspend processing of a request for an LMIA when there is reason to suspect employer non-compliance with certain regulatory conditions

This amendment would provide ESDC with the authority to suspend the processing of an LMIA request for an employer whom ESDC has a reason to suspect is non-compliant with one or more of the following conditions:

If there is a reason to suspect that the employer is not complying with one or more of the above-mentioned TFWP conditions, the processing of an LMIA would be suspended until there is no longer a reason to suspect non-compliance. If there is no longer a reason to suspect non-compliance, or if the employer is found to be in compliance, the suspension would be lifted and the LMIA would be processed. If there is a finding of non-compliance and, by consequence, a determination that the employer is ineligible to employ a foreign national or is in default of any amount owed for an administrative monetary penalty (AMP), ESDC must refuse to process the LMIA so long as the employer is ineligible or has not paid the AMP. If the AMP is paid and any ineligibility period has elapsed, ESDC will proceed with processing the LMIA, which may result in a positive or negative LMIA.

2.4. New assessment requirements for employers applying for an LMIA

This amendment would create new assessment requirements to increase capacity of ESDC to identify potential wrongdoing upon receipt of an employer’s LMIA. This amendment would apply to employers who have never used the TFWP or who have not used the program in more than six years.

The assessment requirements for these employers would be

This amendment would provide the authority to ESDC to assess these criteria for a period of up to two years before the day on which the request for an LMIA is received by ESDC.

2.5. Make wage and labour dispute factors stand-alone LMIA requirements

Under the current regulations, when ESDC conducts an assessment of the LMIA, seven factors are given equal consideration as part of an overall assessment. Failure to meet one or more of these seven factors does not result in an automatic refusal. This amendment would allow ESDC, upon receipt of an LMIA request, to independently assess whether wages set out in the offer of employment are consistent with the prevailing wage rate for the occupation and that the employment of the foreign national is likely to adversely affect the settlement of any labour dispute in progress or the employment of any person involved in the dispute. These two factors would be assessed on a pass or fail basis, while the remaining factors would continue to be taken as part of the overall assessment.

For an employer to receive a positive LMIA, these two requirements would have to be satisfied independently of the other factors assessed.

Amendments applicable to the IMP only

2.6. Collecting information regarding compliance with IMP conditions to ensure program integrity

This amendment would confirm ESDC authority to collect personal information on employers and temporary foreign workers (i.e. information received through the TFWP Service Canada Confidential Tip Line, the online reporting tool, or future communication media) related to an employer’s compliance with the conditions of the IMP. The information collected would then be shared with IRCC inspection officials.

Alignment and technical amendments

3.1 Compliance with provincial or territorial laws that regulate the employment or recruitment of employees, including foreign nationals, in the province where it is intended that the temporary foreign worker will work

Some provinces have requirements for employers to register with the province before recruiting and hiring temporary foreign workers. The employer registration process not only enables proactive government oversight of such employers, but also provides labour authorities with improved information on where temporary foreign workers are working in the province. Some jurisdictions also require mandatory licensing of recruiters to authorize who can and cannot engage in the recruitment and placement of temporary foreign workers.

The proposed amendments would clarify that employers must comply with all provincial and territorial employment and recruitment laws, including those laws that specifically relate to temporary foreign workers.

3.2 Repealing the sections in the IRPR that pertain to employer compliance reviews (ECRs)

Until 2013, ECRs were conducted to verify whether a returning employer had provided their temporary foreign workers with the same occupation, and substantially the same (not less favourable) wages and working conditions, as set out in their offer of employment. In 2013, the authority to conduct inspections to verify employer compliance with these and other conditions was added to the IRPR.

ESDC and IRCC have not used ECR authorities since 2019, because the inspection authorities under the compliance regimes provide a more effective means for detecting employer non-compliance. This amendment would repeal the ECR provisions and bring the IRPR in line with current practices.

3.3 Harmonizing English and French languages

The proposed amendments would also include technical amendments to ensure harmonization between the English and French texts in the amendments to the IRPR that came into force in April of 2020 (SOR/2020-91).

Regulatory development

Consultation

Beginning in August of 2017, the TFWP facilitated a series of consultations with provincial and territorial governments, officials of foreign governments, industry associations, community organizations, settlement agencies, temporary foreign worker support organizations, union representatives, temporary foreign workers, and independent experts. The objective of these consultations was to identify potential enhancements to worker protection measures, communication approaches, and opportunities for the Government of Canada to support the efforts of non-governmental organizations to protect the rights of temporary foreign workers.

Stakeholders presented a number of statements and claims about the TFWP and the situation of temporary foreign workers during these consultations, which were taken into consideration in the development of this regulatory amendment package, including the following:

Modern treaty obligations and Indigenous engagement and consultation

No modern treaty implications are anticipated, because Indigenous peoples in Canada are not impacted by the proposal.

Instrument choice

As the authorities for the compliance regimes of the TFWP and the IMP are found in the IRPR, there is no alternative but to amend the Regulations to add new program requirements and conditions. Some of the proposals codify existing program policies to provide consequences for non-compliance.

Regulatory analysis

Benefits and costs

An important first step in developing a cost-benefit methodology is establishing a baseline scenario against which options may be measured. For this analysis, the baseline is a scenario where there are no changes to the IRPR surrounding worker protections, and existing Employment and Social Development Canada (ESDC) policies continue to be in effect. The baseline scenario is then compared with the regulatory proposal, which would codify certain policies and make regulatory changes to strengthen the compliance regime and Labour Market Impact Assessment (LMIA) application processes as well as enhance worker protections in both the International Mobility Program (IMP) and the Temporary Foreign Worker Program (TFWP). Assumptions for the analysis were based on publicly available information, ESDC and Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) datasets, and subject matter expertise.

The volume and growth of the IMP and the TFWP are assumed to follow the annual average growth rate from 2015 to 2019 recorded volumes. The IMP is assumed to grow at the average annual growth rate until 2024, and then stay constant for the rest of the analytical period (2025–2031). The number of work permits issued from the IMP is expected to grow at a rate of 6.3% until 2024, while IMP applications are expected to grow at a rate of 13.4% until 2024. On the other hand, the TFWP is expected to see growth for each of the years within the analytical time frame. Approved temporary foreign worker positions are expected to grow at a 0.5% rate, the number of work permits issued from the TFWP is expected to grow at a 1.9% rate, and LMIA applications are expected to grow at a 2.7% rate.

Assumptions on the incremental impact to employers will be confirmed with affected stakeholders for final publication, to ensure that their impacts are accurately captured in the cost-benefit analysis results. For further details regarding methodology, the full cost-benefit analysis is available upon request from IRCC.

The costs and benefits of the regulatory proposal are estimated for the period from 2021 to 2030. However, the proposed amendments are expected to come into force in early 2022, resulting in no impacts for the first year of analysis (2021). Costs and benefits of the regulatory proposal are expected to commence in 2022.

The total costs for the regulatory proposal are estimated at $37,677,828 (PV) over 10 years. These costs reflect the transition and ongoing costs to the Government of Canada, as well as costs for employers to provide information to temporary foreign workers, administrative costs associated with commitments and attestations, and costs of providing private health insurance that covers the fees of emergency medical care, during any period for which the temporary foreign workers are not covered by the provincial health insurance system. Total benefits are estimated at $30,523,418 (PV) over 10 years and represent the benefits for temporary foreign workers from employer-provided private health insurance for emergency medical care, and obtaining the most recent information about their rights in Canada in a timelier manner. The analysis estimates a net monetized cost of $7,154,410 (PV) over 10 years. However, there are also many qualitative benefits of the proposal, as the enhancement of temporary foreign worker protections would prevent potential mistreatment or abuse, as well as improve the employer compliance regimes and LMIA assessment processes.

Costs to Government

There would be both transition and ongoing costs to IRCC and ESDC as a result of the regulatory proposal. Transition costs for both departments would include costs for communications products, updates to program delivery instructions, policy updates, IT costs, and costs to provide training and guidance to inspectors and officers. These costs are estimated at $729,051 (PV) and are expected to be incurred only in the year in which the proposed amendments come into force, in 2022.

Ongoing costs to Government would primarily be due to increased processing costs for IRCC and ESDC, estimated at $6,360,333 (PV) over 10 years. The regulatory proposal identifies additional requirements and conditions to which employers must adhere. This means that officers in both departments would undertake new activities to verify that these additional requirements and conditions have been met. This additional work may result in an increase in processing time for LMIA applications, and would increase the overall processing time to conduct inspections for both the IMP and the TFWP.

Costs to employers

Employers in the IMP and the TFWP would bear several ongoing costs as a result of this regulatory proposal. There are costs to employers in both programs to provide the most recent information on workers’ rights in Canada and a copy of the employment contract to temporary foreign workers, where it is not already required in policy. It is estimated that employers would spend an average of five minutes per application to provide a copy of the employment contract, and five minutes per application to provide information, provided by the Government of Canada, on temporary foreign workers’ rights, with duties split between clerical work, administrative support, and managerial approval. The total cost to provide these materials to workers is estimated at $6,391,171 (PV) over 10 years.

There would also be administrative costs for employers in both the TFWP and the IMP. In the TFWP, employers would be required to commit, in the LMIA, that they will

Employers in the IMP would be required to provide two attestations: that neither they, nor any third party they have used to recruit the temporary foreign worker, have charged employment-related fees to temporary foreign workers, and that they have provided workers with a signed copy of the employment contract.

The total administrative cost to businesses to attest or commit that they will meet program requirements is estimated at $643,296 (PV) over 10 years. For details on methodology and assumptions regarding this administrative burden, please refer to the One-for-one rule section below.

The requirement for employers in the TFWP to provide private health insurance that covers the fees of emergency medical care to workers would result in incremental costs to some employers in provinces with provincial health insurance coverage waiting periods. In British Columbia, Saskatchewan, Ontario, Quebec and Yukon, it would represent incremental costs for employers of temporary foreign workers in the High Wage Stream and Global Talent Stream (GTS) of the TFWP. The cost impact is estimated using data on the average age of program participants, various insurance premiums estimates, and data on waiting periods in each province or territory prior to being eligible for provincial or territorial (P/T) health care coverage. It is estimated that employers will bear costs of $23,553,978 (PV) over 10 years to provide private health insurance to cover the fees of emergency medical care for temporary foreign workers. In addition, under both the TFWP and the IMP, employers would be required to make reasonable efforts to provide access to health care services when the temporary foreign worker is injured or becomes ill at the workplace. These costs are not expected to be significant.

The amendments adding new assessment criteria for new employers applying for an LMIA and giving ESDC the authority to suspend processing on LMIA applications are not expected to impose any monetized costs on employers, but may impose a low risk to employers in the form of delays in fulfilling their labour needs. However, the risk of these amendments to employers is mitigated by the fact that these measures would mostly be applied in cases where non-compliance is suspected upon receipt of a new employer’s LMIA and where there is a reason to suspect non-compliance with program conditions. It is unlikely that employers who are in compliance with assessment criteria and with program conditions would be subject to any incremental costs.

There are no expected monetized costs for employers as a result of the amendment to reduce timelines to respond to a notice of preliminary finding, as employers would be subject to the same requirements. However, it is acknowledged that employers would need to provide the same information in a shorter time frame.

Similarly, employers are not expected to bear additional costs due to the prohibition on directly or indirectly charging or recovering recruitment-related fees to temporary foreign workers, or from the requirement to ensure third parties who recruited the temporary foreign worker did not directly or indirectly charge or recover these fees, as these actions are already prohibited in existing policy and most provincial legislation.

Costs to third parties

In cases where employers do not cooperate with government requests for supporting documentation or when the Government would like to verify the accuracy of documents provided by employers, the regulatory amendments would provide IRCC and ESDC with the authority to require these documents from third parties, including chartered banks and other entities. It is important to note that third parties are not legally obligated to respond to or comply with these requests; however, should third parties respond, it is acknowledged that they would bear costs to draft written responses, and prepare and send the requested information. These costs are not expected to be significant, as third parties would only be required to provide documents in a low percentage of cases. Due to data limitations and uncertainty on volumes, this cost is addressed qualitatively.

Benefits to temporary foreign workers

The regulatory amendments would provide a number of benefits to temporary foreign workers. First, requiring that employers provide workers with the most recent information on their employment rights while in Canada and a copy of the signed employment agreement will allow temporary foreign workers to be better informed, as they would have easily accessible information concerning their rights in Canada. Many temporary foreign workers may not currently be aware that information on their rights in Canada is available online, and/or they may not have access to a computer or Internet. By requiring that employers provide hard copies of this information, temporary foreign workers would be better informed and more protected from potentially non-compliant employers. Non-native English or French speakers would also benefit from receiving this information from employers, as the documents would provide details of how to access information in languages other than English or French.

In addition, by requiring employers to provide hard copies of information, it is expected that temporary foreign workers would benefit in the form of time savings. It is assumed that workers currently must spend time to locate and access the most recent information concerning their rights in Canada. It is estimated that it would take native English or French speakers approximately 10 minutes to locate this information online, while for non-native English or French speakers it is estimated to take 20 minutes. Using data on the average wage earned by workers in the IMP and the TFWP, the total monetized benefit of the time saved to workers is calculated as $6,969,441 (PV) over a 10-year period.

The amendment requiring employers to provide private health insurance that covers the fees of emergency medical care to temporary foreign workers would help protect the health and safety of temporary foreign workers by ensuring improved access to health care and medical services. Shifting the cost of private health insurance, for emergency medical care, from workers to employers would result in a benefit to workers of $23,553,978 (PV) over 10 years.

There would be additional benefits to temporary foreign workers in that the regulatory proposal would confirm the authority for ESDC to collect information on compliance with IMP conditions that ESDC receives through the Tip Line. Therefore, tips would reach officers in the correct department more quickly, which would enhance program integrity, allowing for better worker protection.

Moreover, the amendments prohibiting reprisal against temporary foreign workers who come forward with complaints, prohibiting employers and third parties from charging or recovering recruitment-related fees, and providing ESDC and IRCC with the authority to require documents from third parties would all benefit temporary foreign workers by contributing to a safer workplace and improved working conditions.

In addition, adding new assessment requirements for employers applying for an LMIA and granting ESDC the authority to suspend the processing of a request for an LMIA when there is a reason to suspect non-compliance with certain program conditions would reduce the risk of temporary foreign workers entering abusive or exploitative work situations, and help ensure safe working conditions.

By allowing ESDC to separately assess wages and labour dispute requirements, employers would now have to meet these requirements. Therefore, temporary foreign workers would have improved security in the knowledge that they would be paid the prevailing wage, and that they would not become involved in an ongoing labour dispute.

Benefits to employers

In addition to the many benefits identified for temporary foreign workers, the amendments also present a number of benefits to employers in both the IMP and TFWP.

First, the regulations would ensure greater transparency and clarity regarding program requirements and conditions. Employers would be more aware of their responsibilities and program rules, which would limit accidental and involuntary non-compliance.

In addition, the condition for all employers to provide reasonable access to health care services at the workplace and the condition for most TFWP employers to provide private health insurance that covers the fees of emergency medical care would benefit employers, as the temporary foreign workers would be more likely to seek medical attention for illness and/or injury. This would help ensure continued worker productivity and general workplace safety for employers.

Benefits to the Government

Though various costs to Government were identified as a result of the proposal, there are also expected to be significant benefits.

By improving the transparency of requirements, there may be benefits to Government in the form of time saved reviewing instances of non-compliance, and these resources could be reallocated to other areas of program policy and development.

Benefits to the Canadian public

Many of the benefits of the regulatory proposal to temporary foreign workers are also applicable to Canadian workers more broadly.

First, strengthening workplace conditions for temporary foreign workers would positively affect workplace conditions for all Canadians and permanent residents working in Canada, as workplaces tend to be shared environments. As a result, all workers in Canada would experience improved working conditions, which safeguards worker health and productivity.

Furthermore, the condition for all employers under both programs to provide reasonable access to health care services at the workplace and the condition for most TFWP employers to provide private health insurance that covers the fees of emergency medical care would also contribute to the promotion of worker health and productivity for all workers in Canada. By ensuring that temporary foreign workers who are sick or injured have better access to health care, they are less likely to continue to work when ill or injured, thereby helping to prevent the spread of illness to other workers.

In addition, all workers would benefit from making labour disputes a stand-alone requirement in the assessment of LMIA applications, as ongoing labour disputes would be addressed while ensuring that employing temporary foreign workers would not have a negative effect on the settlement of the dispute. Moreover, making wages a standalone requirement would benefit all workers by ensuring that Canadian wages are not negatively impacted by the employment of temporary foreign workers.

Cost-benefit statement
Monetized costs
Impacted stakeholder Description of cost Base year (2021) Other relevant year (2022) Final year (2030) Total
(present value)
Annualized value
Government Transition costs (IT, updates to policy and program delivery instructions, communications, and training) $0 $780,084 $0 $729,051 $103,800
Increased processing costs to check that new program requirements are being met $0 $976,225 $976,225 $6,360,333 $905,568
Employers Cost to provide workers with the most recent information on their rights in Canada and an employment contract $0 $853,046 $1,029,324 $6,391,171 $909,959
Cost to provide private health insurance, emergency medical care, to workers in the TFWP $0 $3,377,158 $3,926,845 $23,553,978 $3,353,557
Administrative costs to provide commitments/attestations to government $0 $84,100 $106,420 $643,296 $91,591
All stakeholders Total costs $0 $6,070,614 $6,038,813 $37,677,828 $5,364,475
Monetized benefits
Impacted stakeholder Description of benefit Base year (2021) Other relevant year (2022) Final year (2030) Total
(present value)
Annualized value
Temporary foreign workers Time saved searching for the most recent information on their rights in Canada $0 $1,036,595 $1,113,071 $6,969,441 $992,292
Benefit of employer-paid private health insurance, for emergency medical care, that TFWs would otherwise have to pay for themselves $0 $3,377,158 $3,926,845 $23,553,978 $3,353,557
All stakeholders Total benefits $0 $4,413,753 $5,039,915 $30,523,418 $4,345,848
Summary of monetized costs and benefits
Impacts Base year (2021) Other relevant year (2022) Final year (2030) Total (present value) Annualized value
Total costs $0 $6,070,614 $6,038,813 $37,677,828 $5,364,475
Total benefits $0 $4,413,753 $5,039,915 $30,523,418 $4,345,848
NET IMPACT $0 −$1,656,861 −$998,898 −$7,154,410 −$1,018,627

Small business lens

The small business lens applies, as there are impacts on small businesses associated with the proposal.

Employers in both the IMP and TFWP would assume costs to provide information and a copy of the employment contract to temporary foreign workers, and for TFWP employers to provide employer-paid private health insurance that covers the fees of emergency medical care, in provinces where a waiting period is applicable before temporary foreign workers are covered by provincial health care programs. In addition, there are also costs for employers to provide attestations and commitments, and there may be further costs associated with the amendments to allow inspections to be launched upon receipt of LMIA applications and to suspend decisions on LMIAs when there is reason to suspect non-compliance, as discussed previously.

While no reliable data exists on the proportion of employers participating in these programs that are small businesses, Statistics Canada notes that 97.9% of businesses operating in Canada are small businesses, and this statistic is used as a proxy for the purposes of the cost-benefit analysis. Data obtained from ESDC reveals that small businesses hire temporary foreign workers at a ratio of 4:10 compared to large businesses, and that small businesses submit 10% of the volume of LMIAs submitted by large employers. Since similar data is not available for the IMP, we extend the assumption of a 4:10 ratio for the volume of temporary foreign workers hired by small businesses to IMP employers as well.

There are no accommodations or flexibilities afforded to small business in the regulatory proposal. However, as many of the proposed amendments already exist in program policies, small businesses have already been subject to the proposed measures and have already incorporated their policy requirements into their business practices. The design of the new employer conditions has taken into consideration the administrative burden for small businesses and therefore allows flexibility wherever possible in implementing the conditions rather than being overly prescriptive (e.g. the method of providing a copy of the offer of employment to the worker is not prescribed).

The compliance regime also has tools available to give businesses, including small ones, some flexibility, such as the opportunity to ask for an extension to reply to a notice of preliminary finding, or an opportunity to provide a justification for non-compliance. Finally, the compliance regimes are set up to take into account the size of the business when applying a penalty for non-compliance. Moreover, the long-term benefits to each business in the form of safer workplaces, improved overall employee health and subsequent increased productivity (and hence profitability), and increased awareness of employer responsibilities are expected to outweigh the costs.

The table below outlines the impacts of the proposal on small businesses.

Small business lens summary
Compliance costs
Activity Annualized value Present value
Cost to provide workers with the most recent information on their rights in Canada and an employment contract $259,988 $1,826,049
Cost to provide paid private health insurance, for emergency medical care, to workers in the TFWP, where applicable $299,176 $2,101,285
Total compliance cost $559,164 $3,927,334
Administrative costs
Activity Annualized value Present value
Administrative costs for employers to provide commitments/attestations to government $26,169 $183,799
Total administrative cost $26,169 $183,799
Total compliance and administrative costs
Totals Annualized value Present value
Total cost (all impacted small businesses) $585,333 $4,111,133
Cost per impacted small business $12 $87

One-for-one rule

The one-for-one rule applies since there is an incremental increase in the administrative burden on businesses, and the proposal is considered an “in” under the rule. The total annualized administrative costs are $50,830 (in 2012 dollars, PV discounted to 2012) as calculated using the prescribed methodology in the Red Tape Reduction Regulations.

Under the proposed regulatory amendments, employers in the IMP would be required to attest to the fact that they have provided workers with a copy of the signed employment contract, and that they have not directly or indirectly charged or recovered recruitment-related fees from temporary foreign workers, and ensured that third parties who recruited temporary foreign workers did not charge or recover these fees. Similarly, employers in TFWP would be required to provide commitments stating that they will provide workers with a copy of the signed employment contract, and that they have not and will not directly or indirectly charge or recover LMIA fees or recruitment-related fees from workers, and ensure third parties who recruited the temporary foreign workers did not charge or recover these fees. These requirements present an administrative burden for employers. The attestations and commitments are required in the form of new checkboxes that employers would be required to check on their application. Two checkboxes will be added to IMP applications to facilitate the attestations, and five checkboxes will be added to LMIA applications to facilitate commitments. It is estimated that it takes employers 20 seconds to read, understand, and acknowledge each checkbox at a cost of labour (including overhead in 2012 dollars) of $25/hour ($23/hour in 2020 dollars excluding overhead). It is estimated that employers in the IMP would take an additional 40 seconds to complete each employer application, while employers in the TFWP would take an additional 100 seconds to complete each LMIA application. The total costs for employers to provide attestations and commitments would constitute $643,296 over 10 years (2020 dollars, PV discounted to 2021).

Regulatory cooperation and alignment

The proposal is not related to a work plan or commitment under a formal regulatory cooperation forum.

The proposed amendments to clarify that employers must comply with all provincial and territorial employment and recruitment laws, including those laws that specifically relate to temporary foreign workers, would minimize regulatory differences with these provinces and complement and support provincial and territorial efforts to protect temporary foreign workers.

Strategic environmental assessment

In accordance with the Cabinet Directive on the Environmental Assessment of Policy, Plan and Program Proposals, a preliminary scan concluded that a strategic environmental assessment is not required.

Gender-based analysis plus

While the overall objective of the proposed regulatory amendments to the IRPR is to improve protection for all temporary foreign workers who work in Canada, the effect of these improvements may vary according to gender, particularly as it intersects with other identity factors such as race, ethnicity, religion, age, and mental or physical disability. A power imbalance arguably exists in all employment relationships. However, temporary foreign workers who encounter barriers related to finances, social support, and/or language may experience an even greater disadvantage when attempting to navigate abusive employment situations. While as a cohort, temporary foreign workers are more susceptible to workplace abuse, gender can exacerbate this vulnerability.

It is broadly understood that temporary foreign workers fear reporting abuse and, as a result, reliable data are not available to quantitatively assess their experiences. However, qualitative evidence suggests pockets of profound vulnerability. The qualitative lived experience of temporary foreign workers in Canada has been described as making them vulnerable, exploited, in a precarious situation, and at risk of abuse by employers. These experiences have been clearly documented and well established in the academic literature over the past two decades, in particular for those working in agricultural (which tend to be predominantly men) and caregiving (predominantly women) occupations. The addition of reprisal to the definition of abuse is expected to help mitigate against some of these particular vulnerabilities.

More men than women participate in Canada’s two temporary foreign worker programs. In 2019, approximately 400 000 temporary foreign workers were employed in the TFWP and the IMP. Under the TFWP, women represented approximately 18% of temporary foreign workers across all skill levels in 2019. This may be due to the fact that many of the sectors employing temporary foreign workers under the TFWP are composed of physical, labour-intensive occupations, such as agriculture. These occupations have traditionally been male dominated. Therefore, the proposed regulatory amendments are expected to have a greater impact on men in the TFWP, primarily due to the fact there are more men hired under the program.

While men employed under the IMP also outnumbered women in many other streams of work, the gender disparity was not as pronounced as in the TFWP. For example, of the temporary foreign workers employed through the IMP in 2019, women represented 43% and men represented 57%. As a result, the proposed regulatory amendments are expected to impact male and female temporary foreign workers who are hired under the IMP in roughly equal measure.

Since women represent the vast majority of those in caregiving professions, are generally concentrated in the low-wage stream of the TFWP, and may be working in private dwellings, the Government’s ability to inspect against some of the new regulatory conditions could be limited in areas where women are working. While IRCC and ESDC have authority under the IRPR to enter private property for the purpose of an employer compliance inspection, the consent of the occupant, or a warrant, is required to enter a dwelling-house, which can render the process more complex and lengthy. In particular, the proposed amendment that would require employers to provide the most recent information to a temporary foreign worker with respect to their rights in Canada may encounter particular inspection challenges, as it would require an inspecting official to enter the private dwelling of the employer to verify whether the information was provided to the worker. More broadly, there is a concern that language and/or literacy barriers may reduce the impact of this regulatory requirement (i.e. if a temporary foreign worker is not proficient in English or French, the information in the poster may not benefit them). To address this, the Government of Canada makes information available to foreign nationals in multiple languages beyond English and French, including information on how to know if the job the worker is being asked to perform is safe and what to do if it is not, how to change employers, and contact information for a variety of resources and supports.

The proposed regulatory amendments are expected to address many of the intersecting and compounding factors of vulnerability experienced by temporary foreign workers in Canada through the introduction of specific protections and supports, such as the provision of private health insurance that covers the fees of emergency medical care and the specific inclusion of reprisal to the definition of abuse. Following implementation and moving forward, IRCC and ESDC would continue to rigorously analyze the impacts of these regulatory amendments as part of regular monitoring activities, with the purpose of making guidance, policy or regulatory amendments as required to adjust for evolving gender-based analysis plus (GBA+) considerations.

Implementation, compliance and enforcement, and service standards

Implementation

The regulations would come into force 30 days after registration in order to provide employers with sufficient time to familiarize themselves with new requirements and to make necessary adjustments to comply.

For Government

ESDC and IRCC would work together to implement the proposed amendments. Before the proposed amendments come into force, IRCC would make IT updates to include the new employer attestation functionality in the Employer Portal, whereby employers would be able to specifically attest they have provided the temporary foreign worker with a signed copy of their employment agreement before the work permit application is made, and that they have not charged or recovered fees from the temporary foreign worker, and have ensured third parties who recruited the temporary foreign worker did not do so. ESDC will make changes to the Labour Market Impact Assessment request form. IRCC and ESDC would develop new training and guidance materials to inform and support officers, who would then be required to undertake training to become familiar with how to conduct inspections on the new employer conditions and how to apply consequences for determinations of non-compliance.

For employers

Employers would be required to familiarize themselves with the new regulatory conditions and requirements, the consequences of non-compliance, and the guidance on how to ensure they are compliant.

Employers would be responsible for purchasing private health insurance that covers the fees of emergency medical care for temporary foreign workers when applicable.

Employers would also be required to ensure that they consistently have the most up-to-date information on temporary foreign workers’ rights (this information will be made available by the Government to employers), that the information is provided to any temporary foreign workers they employ, and that this information is posted in the workplace.

Employers would be further required to ensure that they provide the workers they hire with a copy of their employment agreement, and that they secure the signature of the worker before providing the offer of employment to IRCC (for the International Mobility Program) or before the period of employment (for the Temporary Foreign Worker Program).

Additionally, in cases where one is issued, employers would be required to adjust their timelines to respond to the issuance of a notice of preliminary finding.

Compliance and enforcement

Employers who are found to have violated one or more of the program conditions or requirements may be subject to consequences, which include warning letters, administrative monetary penalties (ranging from $500 to $100 000 per violation up to a maximum of $1 million), and temporary or permanent periods of ineligibility from using either program. Factors such as previous non-compliance, the size of the employer, and the severity of the violation are taken into consideration when issuing consequences. Additionally, employers found to be non-compliant have their names posted on a publicly available Government of Canada website.

Employers may be inspected based on a reason to suspect non-compliance (e.g. a complaint or tip was received), if there is a history of non-compliance, and/or by random selection. In response to COVID-19, employers may now also be inspected if there is notification of the introduction or spread of a communicable disease introduced at the workplace, or if the employer employs a temporary foreign worker who is, or was, subject to the Quarantine Act or the Emergencies Act.

Compliance regimes for both programs have mechanisms in place to ensure procedural fairness for employers. If non-compliance is identified during an inspection, employers are given a formal opportunity to provide additional information to demonstrate their compliance or to justify instances of non-compliance with program conditions. Reasons an employer may use to justify their non-compliance, such as a change in federal or provincial law, or an accounting error, are identified in the Immigration and Refugee Protection Regulations.

Once a final decision is rendered, the employer is bound by the decision but may apply for leave to the Federal Court to commence an application for judicial review.

Contacts

Ian Gillespie
Director
Temporary Resident Policy and Programs Division
Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada
365 Laurier Avenue West
Ottawa, Ontario
K1A 1L1
Email: IRCC.TempResRegulations-ResTempReglement.IRCC@cic.gc.ca

Brian Hickey
Director General
Temporary Foreign Worker Program
Employment and Social Development Canada
140 Promenade du Portage
Gatineau, Quebec
K1A 0J9
Email: EDSC.DGCE.DPIRP.TET-TFW.IPPI.SEB.ESDC@hrsdc-rhdcc.gc.ca

PROPOSED REGULATORY TEXT

Notice is given that the Administrator in Council, pursuant to subsections 4(2.1)footnote a and 5(1), section 32footnote b and paragraph 150.1(1)(a)footnote c of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Actfootnote d, proposes to make the annexed Regulations Amending the Immigration and Refugee Protection Regulations (Temporary Foreign Workers).

Interested persons may make representations concerning the proposed Regulations within 30 days after the date of publication of this notice. All such representations must cite the Canada Gazette, Part I, and the date of publication of this notice, and be addressed to Ian Gillespie, Director, Temporary Resident Policy and Programs Division, Department of Citizenship and Immigration, 365 Laurier Avenue West, Ottawa, Ontario K1A 1L1 (email: IRCC.TempResRegulations-ResTempReglement.IRCC@cic.gc.ca).

Ottawa, June 23, 2021

Julie Adair
Assistant Clerk of the Privy Council

Regulations Amending the Immigration and Refugee Protection Regulations (Temporary Foreign Workers)

Amendments

1 Subsection 82(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Regulationsfootnote 1 is replaced by the following:

Definition of arranged employment

82 (1) In this section, arranged employment means an offer of employment that is made by a single employer other than an embassy, high commission or consulate in Canada or an employer who is referred to in subparagraph 200(3)(h)(ii) or (iii), that is for continuous full-time work in Canada having a duration of at least one year after the date on which a permanent resident visa is issued, and that is in an occupation that is listed in Skill Type 0 Management Occupations or Skill Level A or B of the National Occupational Classification matrix.

2 (1) Clause 87.2(3)(d)(ii)(D) of the Regulations is replaced by the following:

(2) Clause 87.2(3)(d)(iii)(C) of the Regulations is replaced by the following:

(3) Clause 87.2(3)(d)(iv)(B) of the Regulations is replaced by the following:

3 Paragraph 183(1)(b.2) of the Regulations is replaced by the following:

4 Paragraph 196.1(b) of the Regulations is replaced by the following:

5 (1) Section 196.2 of the Regulations is amended by striking out “and” at the end of paragraph (c), by adding “and” at the end of paragraph (d) and by adding the following after paragraph (d):

(2) Section 196.2 of the Regulations is renumbered as subsection 196.2(1) and is amended by adding the following:

Reprisal

(2) For the purpose of subsection (1) reprisal consists of any measure, including the following, that is taken by or on behalf of an employer against a foreign national referred to in subparagraph 200(1)(c)(ii.1) or (iii) – and that adversely affects the foreign national's employment or working conditions – because the foreign national has reported that the conditions set out in section 209.2 or 209.3 have not been complied with or has in good faith cooperated with an inspection conducted under section 209.7, 209.8 or 209.9:

6 (1) Subparagraphs 200(1)(c)(ii.1) and (iii) of the Regulations are replaced by the following:

(2) Subparagraph 200(3)(h)(i) of the Regulations is repealed.

(3) Paragraph 200(5)(d) of the Regulations is replaced by the following:

7 (1) Subsection 203(1) of the Regulations is amended by striking out “and” at the end of paragraph (d) and by replacing paragraph (e) with the following:

(2) Subsection 203(1.1) of the Regulations is replaced by the following:

Effect on labour market

(1.1) For the purposes of paragraph (1)(b), the employment of the foreign national is unlikely to have a positive or neutral effect on the labour market in Canada if

(3) The portion of subsection 203(2) of the Regulations before paragraph (a) is replaced by the following:

Assessment on request

(2) Subject to subsection (2.02), the Department of Employment and Social Development must provide the assessment referred to in subsection (1) on the request of an officer or an employer or group of employers, none of whom is an employer who

(4) Paragraph 203(2)(b) of the Regulations is replaced by the following:

(5) Subsection 203(2.1) of the Regulations is replaced by the following:

Suspension of processing of requests

(2.02) The processing of a request is suspended so long as the Department of Employment and Social Development has a reason to suspect that the employer who made the request is not complying with the conditions set out in any of subparagraph 209.3(1)(a)(i), 209.3(1)(a)(iv), 209.3(1)(a)(v) or 209.3(1)(a)(vii) to 209.3(1)(a)(xii).

Basis of Assessment

(2.1) The assessment provided by the Department of Employment and Social Development on the matters set out in paragraphs (1)(a) to (g) must be based on any information provided by the employer making the offer and any other relevant information.

(6) The portion of subsection 203(3) of the Regulations before paragraph (a) is replaced by the following:

Factors — effect on labour market

(3) An assessment provided by the Department of Employment and Social Development with respect to the matters referred to in paragraph (1)(b) must, unless the employment of the foreign national is unlikely to have a positive or neutral effect on the labour market in Canada as a result of the application of subsection (1.01) or (1.1) be based on the following factors:

(7) Paragraph 203(3)(d) of the Regulations is replaced by the following:

(8) Paragraph 203(3)(f) of the Regulations is repealed.

(9) Subsections 203(5) and (6) of the Regulations are replaced by the following:

Affiliate

(5) For the purposes of this section, an affiliate includes

Control

(6) For the purposes of subsection (5), control, whether direct or indirect, exercised or not, includes

8 Section 209.11 of the Regulations is amended by striking out “and” at the end of paragraph (c), by adding “and” at the end of paragraph (d) and by adding the following after paragraph (d):

9 (1) Subparagraph 209.2(1)(a)(ii) of the Regulations is replaced by the following:

(2) Subparagraph 209.2(1)(a)(vi) of the French version of the Regulations is replaced by the following:

(3) Paragraph 209.2(1)(a) of the Regulations is amended by striking out “and” at the end of subparagraph (vi) and adding the following after subparagraph (vii):

(4) Subsection 209.2(1) of the Regulations is amended by adding the following after paragraph (a):

(5) Subsection 209.2(3) of the Regulations is replaced by the following:

Justification

(3) A failure to comply with any of the conditions set out in subparagraphs (1)(a)(i) to (viii) and paragraph (1)(a.1) is justified if it results from

Justification

(3.1) A failure to comply with any of the conditions set out in subparagraphs (1)(a)(ix) and (x) is justified if the employer

10 (1) Subparagraph 209.3(1)(a)(ii) of the Regulations is replaced by the following:

(2) Subparagraphs 209.3(1)(a)(viii) to (xi) of the French version of the Regulations are replaced by the following:

(3) Paragraph 209.3(1)(a) of the Regulations is amended by striking out “and” at the end of subparagraph (xi) and by adding the following after subparagraph (xii):

(4) Subsection 209.3(1) of the Regulations is amended by adding the following after paragraph (a):

(5) Subsection 209.3(3) of the Regulations is replaced by the following:

Justification

(3) A failure to comply with any of the conditions set out in subparagraphs (1)(a)(i) to (xiv) and paragraphs (1)(a.1) and (b) is justified if it results from a:

(6) Section 209.3 of the Regulations is amended by adding the following after subsection (4):

Justification

(5) A failure to comply with any of the conditions set out in subparagraphs (1)(a)(xv) and (xvi) is justified if the employer

11 Paragraph 209.4(1)(b) of the Regulations is replaced by the following:

12 (1) Paragraph 209.5(a) of the French version of the Regulations is replaced by the following:

(2) Paragraphs 209.5(b) and (c) of the Regulations are replaced by the following:

13 (1) Subsection 209.7(1) of the Regulations is amended by striking out “and” at the end of paragraph (a) and by adding “and” at the end of paragraph (b) and by adding the following after paragraph (b):

(2) Subsection 209.7(2) of the Regulations is replaced by the following:

Minister of Employment and Social Development

(2) The Minister of Employment and Social Development may exercise the powers set out in paragraphs (1)(a) and (c) on the request of an officer.

14 Section 209.92 of the Regulations and the heading before it are replaced by the following:

Collection and Disclosure of Information

Collection of information

209.911 The Minister of Employment and Social Development may collect information related to an employer's compliance with the conditions set out in section 209.2.

Disclosure of information

209.92 An officer may, for the purposes of determining whether a work permit is to be issued to a foreign national under subsection 200(1), of making a determination under paragraphs 203(1)(a) to (g), if applicable, or of verifying compliance with the conditions set out in sections 209.2 to 209.4, disclose to the Minister of Employment and Social Development and to the competent authorities of the provinces concerned information that relates to an application for a work permit or to an employer's compliance with the conditions set out in sections 209.2 to 209.4.

15 The portion of subsection 209.95(1) of the Regulations before paragraph (a) is replaced by the following:

Violations

209.95 (1) An employer referred to in subsection 209.2(1) or 209.3(1) who fails to comply with one of the conditions set out in the provisions listed in column 1 of Table 1 of Schedule 2 — if the failure to do so is not justified under subsection 209.2(3), (4) or (5), 209.3(3), (4) or (5), or 209.4(2) — commits a violation and

16 (1) Subsection 209.96(1) of the Regulations is replaced by the following:

Separate violation — multiple foreign nationals

209.96 (1) A failure to comply — that is not justified under subsection 209.2(3), (4) or (5), 209.3(3), (4) or (5) or 209.4(2) — with a condition that affects more than one foreign national constitutes a separate violation for each foreign national affected.

(2) Subsection 209.96(4) of the Regulations is replaced by the following:

Separate violation — abuse

(4) A failure to comply — that is not justified under subsection 209.2(3) or 209.3(3) — with the condition set out in item 17 of Table 1 of Schedule 2 with respect to any one of the elements set out in paragraphs 196.2(1)(a) to (e) constitutes a separate violation.

17 Section 209.97 of the Regulations is replaced by the following:

Provisions

209.97 A failure to comply — that is not justified under subsection 209.2(3), (4) or (5), 209.3(3), (4) or (5) or 209.4(2) — with a condition that is set out in one of the provisions listed in column 1 of Table 1 of Schedule 2 is classified as a violation of Type A, Type B or Type C as set out in column 3 of that Table.

18 Subsections 209.993(1) and (2) of the Regulations are replaced by the following:

Notice — issuance by officer

209.993 (1) If an officer assesses, on the basis of information obtained by any officer or the Minister of Employment and Social Development during the exercise of the powers set out in sections 209.6 to 209.8 and any other relevant information, that an employer has committed a violation because that employer failed to comply with one of the conditions set out in the provisions listed in column 1 of Table 1 of Schedule 2 and the failure to do so was not justified under subsection 209.2(3), (4) or (5) or 209.4(2), the officer must issue a notice of preliminary finding to the employer.

Notice — issuance by Minister

(2) If the Minister of Employment and Social Development assesses, on the basis of information obtained during the exercise of the powers set out in sections 209.6, 209.7 and 209.9 and any other relevant information, that an employer has committed a violation because that employer failed to comply with one of the conditions set out in the provisions listed in column 1 of Table 1 of Schedule 2 and the failure to do so was not justified under subsection 209.3(3), (4) or (5) or 209.4(2), that Minister must issue a notice of preliminary finding to the employer.

19 The portion of subsection 209.994(1) of the Regulations before paragraph (a) is replaced by the following:

Submissions by employer — period

209.994 (1) An employer to whom a notice of preliminary finding under section 209.993 or a corrected notice of preliminary finding under section 209.995 is issued may, within 15 days after the day on which it is received,

20 Subsections 209.996(1) and (2) of the Regulations are replaced by the following:

Notice — issuance by officer

209.996 (1) Subject to subsection (3), if an officer determines, on the basis of information obtained by any officer or the Minister of Employment and Social Development during the exercise of the powers set out in sections 209.6 to 209.8 and any other relevant information, that an employer has committed a violation because that employer failed to comply with one of the conditions set out in the provisions listed in column 1 of Table 1 of Schedule 2 and the failure to do so was not justified under subsection 209.2(3), (4) or (5) or 209.4(2), the officer must issue a notice of final determination to the employer.

Notice — issuance by Minister

(2) Subject to subsection (3), if the Minister of Employment and Social Development determines, on the basis of information obtained during the exercise of the powers set out in sections 209.6, 209.7 and 209.9 and any other relevant information, that an employer has committed a violation because that employer failed to comply with one of the conditions set out in the provisions listed in column 1 of Table 1 of Schedule 2 and the failure to do so was not justified under subsection 209.3(3), (4) or (5) or 209.4(2), that Minister must issue a notice of final determination to the employer.

21 Paragraph 209.997(2)(c) of the Regulations is replaced by the following:

22 (1) The portion of item 8 of Table 1 of Schedule 2 to the Regulations in column 2 is replaced by the following:
Item

Column 2

Short-form Description

8 Comply with the federal or provincial laws that regulate the employment or recruitment of employees, including foreign nationals, in the province in which the foreign national works
(2) The portion of item 23 of Table 1 of Schedule 2 of the French version to the Regulations in column 2 is replaced by the following:
Article

Colonne 2

Description sommaire

23 Fournir à l'étranger contaminé par la COVID-19 ou qui en présente des signes et des symptômes, un logement qui a une chambre individuelle, avec accès à une salle de bain privée, qui lui permet de s'isoler
(3) Table 1 of Schedule 2 to the Regulations is amended by adding the following after item 24:
Item

Column 1

Provision

Column 2

Short-form Description

Column 3

Classification

25 209.2(1)(a.1) and
209.3(1)(a.1)
Provide the foreign national with a paper copy in their chosen official language of Canada of the most recent information with respect to the foreign national's rights in Canada that is made available by the Government of Canada for that purpose Type B
26 209.2(1)(a)(ii.1) and
209.3(1)(a)(ii.1)
Post at the foreign national's workplace at a location that is accessible to them, a paper copy of the information referred to in
paragraph 209.2(1)(a.1) or paragraph 209.3(1)(a.1), as the case may be
Type B
27 209.2(1)(a)(ix) and
209.3(1)(a)(xv)
Not directly or indirectly charge or recover from the foreign national the fees indicated Type C
28 209.2(1)(a)(x) and
209.3(1)(a)(xvi)
Ensure that any person who recruited the foreign national for the employer does not, directly or indirectly, charge or recover from the foreign national the fees indicated Type C
29 209.3(1)(a)(xiii) Except in the case of an employer who employs a foreign national to perform work under an international agreement between Canada and one or more countries concerning seasonal agricultural workers and the agreement includes health insurance, must obtain and pay for private health insurance from a Canadian insurance provider that covers the costs of emergency medical care for any period during which the foreign national is not covered by the applicable provincial health insurance system Type C
30 209.2(1)(a)(viii) and
209.3(1)(a)(xiv)
Make reasonable efforts to provide to the foreign national access to health care services when the foreign national is injured or becomes ill at the workplace Type C

Coming into Force

23 These Regulations come into force at 00:00:01 a.m. Eastern daylight time on the 30th day after the day on which they are registered.