Attracting & Retaining Foreign Workers Through the BC Provincial Nominee Program
Transcription
Attracting & Retaining Foreign Workers Through the BC Provincial Nominee Program
Attracting & Retaining Foreign Workers Through the BC Provincial Nominee Program HR Tech Group October 9, 2014 Agenda Section 1: By the Numbers PNP• Office & Services BC Breakdown Background • National Context Immigration Trends • Temporary vs. Permanent Section 2: Federal Roles PNP Planning Context • Federal TFW Program & Allocations Nominations – Results Federal Government Process Skills• Immigration • mnn Questions? Section 3: Provincial Role • ;ll;kl;kl;k 2 PNP Team (55 staff) Executive Director 4 Directors 6 Managers 27 Program Advisors (19 SI / 8 BI) 5 Administrative Officers (Policy, QA, Intake, Marketing) 2 Information Officers 1 Data Management Technician 9 Program Assistants PNP Services Review applications for nomination Provide program information in-person and via phone / email. Orient job seekers to the BC labour market. Conduct targeted outreach to PNP clients. Support employer / industry led international recruitment. Provide market intelligence. Facilitate contact with public employment network in priority markets. Background 1: Byimmigration the Numbers PNP isSection an economic program administered jointly by the Ministry of•Jobs, Tourism & Skills Training and Citizenship & Immigration BC Breakdown Canada (CIC). • National Context Operates under the 2010 Canada – B.C. Immigration Agreement. • to Temporary vs. Permanent Allows B.C. select (nominate) immigrants for permanent residence based on the province’s labour market and economic development needs, Section 2: Federal Roles priorities, and selection criteria. • final Federal TFW Program CIC retains admissibility authority of nominees and their eligible family members, and issues visas. • Federal Government Process CIC sets annual nominations targets for individual provinces/territories and mnn of provincial nominees admitted annually to Canada as the overall• number permanent residents. BC allocated 4,150 for 2014. Section 3: Provincial Role • ;ll;kl;kl;k 5 Immigration to BC Immigrants to BC: 2003 to 2012 50,000 44,770 45,000 44,188 43,993 42,084 41,439 38,961 40,000 37,026 35,229 34,787 35,000 36,176 30,000 25,000 20,000 15,000 10,000 4,709 “What oil has been to Alberta since the 1970s-80s 3,629 5,000 2,522 1,924 is what is going789 to be for British Columbia, 441 LNG 598 0 nothing less2004 than that. ” 2003 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 BC Permanent Residents Total Citizenship and Immigration Canada, 2012 4,900 4,305 2010 2011 5,932 2012 Provincial Nominees 6 Top 10 Source Countries To BC Immigrants to BC by Source Countries: Total 36,176 Other 26% China 23% Taiwan 2% Japan 2% India 15% Mexico 2% Iran 3% UK 4% USA 5% South Korea 6% Philippines 14% 7 Citizenship and Immigration Canada, 2012 Planning Context Background BCPNP PNP Planning Context 3,756* 3,531* 3,525* 2010 2011 PNP Nominations Approved 2005-2012 2,694 2,331 1,837 1,147 544 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2012 * BC secured additional nominations in 2010, 2011, & 2012 through reallocation of unused nominations from other provinces & the Federal Skilled Worker Backlog project in 2012. 8 BC PNP Planning Context Nomination Allocations by Province 2013 Province Allocation % of Total Allocation Factors in planning BC’s nomination targets Alberta 5,500 25% Provincial labour supplydemand outlook Manitoba 5,000 22% Historical program use/demand Saskatchewan 4,450 20% Operational capacity of PNP British Columbia 3,800 17% Ontario 1,300 6% National nomination & immigration levels Other 2,265 10% Total 22,315 100% Citizenship & Immigration Canada 28/08/2013 9 Results: Skills and Business Nominations Nominations 4,000 3,500 3,000 2,500 2,000 Business 1,500 Skills 1,000 500 0 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 Program Streams Provincial Nominee Program Skills Immigration - Attract and retain workers - Retain international students in BC -Transfer expertise, skills and knowledge Business Immigration - Target investment-ready entrepreneurs - Create jobs in BC - Promote regional economic development 11 Categories at a Glance Business Immigration Stream Skills Immigration Stream Attract entrepreneurs making at-risk investments contributing to economic development Attract & retain talent to help meet labour market needs Regional Entrepreneur Invest $200k Create 1 job Job offer required Job offer not required Skilled Workers International Post-Graduates Outside Metro Van/Abbotsford Health Care Professionals Entrepreneur International Graduates Invest $400k Create 3 jobs Strategic Projects (corporate investment for branch/subsidiary) Invest $500k Create 3 jobs per nominee Entry Level or Semi-Skilled Northeast Pilot Project Categoriesfor forSkills Workers Categories Immigration - Skilled Worker - HealthCare Professional - Entry Level or Semi-skilled - North East Pilot Project - International Graduate - International Post-Graduate 13 National Classification (NOC) NationalOccupation Occupation Classification • Established by HRSDC / Service Canada • National Occupation Classification (NOC) of all occupations: using 4-digit NOC Code • Skilled Occupations: – NOC ‘O’ = Management positions – NOC ‘A’ = Occupations requiring a Degree or Diploma – NOC ‘B’ = Occupations requiring Technical Training • Entry-level Semi-skilled Occupations: – NOC ‘C’ = Occupations considered Semi-Skilled – NOC ‘D’ = Occupations considered Entry-level 14 Skilled Worker EMPLOYER SKILLED WORKER - Min. 2 years related - Good financial standing - Established for 1 year - Min. 3 full-time equivalent staff (5 in Metro Vancouver) - Efforts to recruit locally - Full-time indeterminate offer - Market rate wages experience - Requisite education for job - BC Certification (if required) - Legally able to work in BC - Establish economically * Health Care Professional contact Health Match BC www.healthmatchbc.org Joint Application 15 International Graduate INTERNATIONAL GRADUATE EMPLOYER - Good financial standing - Established for 1 year - Min. 3 full-time equivalent staff (5 in Metro Vancouver) - Efforts to recruit locally - Full-time indeterminate offer - Market rate wages - NOC C & D acceptable with a “progression plan” -Degree /Diploma/Certificate in an eligible program in Canada - Completed at an eligible institution in Canada - 8 months full-time study - Intent to reside in BC - Establish economically - NOC C & D applications will require valid English language test scores Joint Application 16 International Post-Graduate EMPLOYER - No job offer required INTERNATIONAL POST- GRADUATE - Completed requirements for a Master’s or PhD at an eligible BC institution - Eligible studies limited to Natural and Applied Sciences - Intent to reside in BC - Establish economically 17 Income Threshold – Ability to Establish Economically Size of Family Unit Income Threshold by Area of Residence Metropolitan Vancouver Rest of BC 1 $21,282 $17,738 2 $26,496 $22,081 3 $32,574 $27,146 4 $39,548 $32,960 5 $44,855 $37,382 6 $50,588 $42,161 7 or more $56,323 $46,940 18 Skills Nominations by Occupation (2013) Occupational Group Service supervisors & specialized service Construction & industrial trades Service support and other service Professional & technical - natural/applied sci Management Professional & technical - business & finance Professional & technical - health Transport & heavy equipment operation Service representatives & other services Retail sales supervisors & specialized sales Top 10 (% of total) 2013 16% 10% 10% 10% 9% 5% 4% 3% 3% 2% 71% Application Process PNP Application Assessment • One-time processing fee $550 • 8-9 month processing Nomination • Work Permit Support Letter (LMIAexempt) • Nomination Certificate Post Nomination • Submit application for PR to CIC • Average 12-14 months processing 20 Express Entry • In Jan 2015, Citizenship and Immigration Canada (CIC) will launch a new electronic system called Express Entry to manage applications for permanent residence. • BC PNP is working closely with our colleagues at CIC to define BC PNP’s Express Entry stream and application process. • Visit CIC’s website for more information: http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/immigrate/express/expressentry.asp 21 Current State of the PNP Challenges Opportunities • Federal program changes and impact on PNP • Increase in intake resulting in lengthier processing times • Uncertainty of Express Entry impact • Decreasing TFW pool and impact on PNP intake • Provincial government’s fiscal constraints • Identify gaps and develop new streams to address labour market needs • Intake Management Strategy to align with labour market priorities • Alignment of resources to areas of priority • Program evaluation resulting in program realignment/development 22 Thank You BC Provincial Nominee Program Economic Immigration Programs Ministry of Jobs, Tourism & Skills Training Province of British Columbia Tel: Fax: E-Mail: +1 (604) 775-2227 +1 (604) 660-4092 [email protected] BC PNP www.welcomebc.ca/PNP CIC www.cic.gc.ca 23