'We came here with a dream for a good life': International students in Canada could face deportation – CTV News

Hundreds of thousands of international graduate students could be facing deportation when their work permits expire over the next year.
Speaking from a tent encampment in Brampton, Ontario, where she’s been protesting recent immigration policy changes, Ontario college graduate, Gurkirat Kaur, tells CTV News she doesn’t “want to live (in Canada) illegally.”
Kaur is one of more than 200,000 international students in Canada who’ve already graduated and are now at risk of losing their legal status when their work permits expire over the next 13 months.
Recent changes to the federal government’s immigration policy, which includes new restrictions on post graduate work permits, has Kaur and many others fearful that their permanent resident requests will be denied and when their work permits expire, they’ll be left with one of two choices: stay in Canada illegally or be forced to leave the country.
Kaur says she paid $36,000 to get her diploma.
Kaur says her father spent his life savings to send her to Ontario’s Centennial College, where in 2022, she graduated with a bio-technology diploma. Currently working for a pharmaceutical company, her work permit expires in ten months.
“I have already invested so much on my education. I have paid $36,000 to get my diploma,” said a distraught Kaur.
She and others say they were sold on coming to Canada by the federal government, with advertising that told students to come “study, explore, work and stay,” according to Kaur.
Though, Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) is now sharing a different message to international students.
“Applying to study in a Canadian institution provides a temporary status in Canada, not a permanent one and having a temporary status does not guarantee a transition to permanent residence,” the IRCC says in part in an email to CTV News.
“Post-graduate work permit eligibility parameters have been recalibrated based on human capital and labour market factors,” the department added.
International graduate student Bikram Singh’s work permit has already expired.
International graduate student Bikram Singh’s work permit has already expired. The automotive technician is now using a visitor’s visa to stay in the country, but he’s fearful he’ll soon be deported, even though he too is a graduate of an Ontario college.
“We came here with a dream for a good life, but you can’t imagine a good life without permanent residency” say Singh.
Ottawa’s immigration changes also include a new cap on the number of international students accepted into the country. In response, Ontario’s Sheridan College announced this week that it was suspending 40 programs and laying off staff.
In an email to CTV News, Sheridan College claims that “Based on our enrolment projections, we will have about 30 per cent fewer students in the coming years, which will lead to a loss of approximately $112M in revenue in the next fiscal year. As such, we must reduce our expenses.”
This week, Canada’s Immigration Minister Marc Miller was forced to defend the Liberals’ recent changes to its policy, including how it plans to track that residents with an expired status are leaving the country.
Those at the encampment in Brampton, Ontario are hoping it doesn’t come to that.
They’re calling on Ottawa to extend expiring work permits and change the term from three to five years in length. They’re also asking the federal government to hold true on the promise they say they were given when the decided to come to Canada — a clear, fair path towards receiving permanent residency. 
The Shopping Trends team is independent of the journalists at CTV News. We may earn a commission when you use our links to shop. Read about us.
In the last of a three-part investigation, W5's Avery Haines was given rare access to a Syrian prison, where thousands of accused high-ranking ISIS members are being held.

The federal government's five-page piece of legislation to enact Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's promised two-month tax break on a range of consumer goods over the holidays passed in the House of Commons late Thursday.

Sleeping and waking up at different times is associated with an increased risk of heart attack and stroke, even for people who get the recommended amount of sleep, according to new research.

It’s a Thanksgiving miracle for one California family after a man who went missing in 1999 was found 25 years later when his sister saw a photo of him in an online article, authorities said.

As Australia moves to ban social media for children under 16, Quebec is debating whether to follow suit.

After more than five years of frenetic reconstruction work, Notre Dame Cathedral showed its new self to the world Friday, with rebuilt soaring ceilings and creamy good-as-new stonework erasing somber memories of its devastating fire in 2019.

The union representing Canada Post workers says the Crown corporation has been laying off striking employees as the labour action by more than 55,000 workers approaches the two-week mark.

A budgeting expert says there are a number of ways shoppers can avoid getting enveloped by the sales frenzy and resist spending beyond their means.

A shopping mall and office complex in downtown Montreal is being criticized for using the popular children's song 'Baby Shark' to discourage unhoused people from loitering in its emergency exit stairwells.

Vancouver Mayor Ken Sim has apparently expressed interest in cryptocurrency investments.

A dump truck driver has been handed more than $700 in fines after one of his wheels detached and flew into the front of an oncoming SUV in B.C.’s Fraser Valley on Thursday.

Two months after a Maple Ridge tea shop was targeted in an alarming act of vandalism, authorities have identified a suspect.

Toronto police have released new details about a series of attempted carjackings and shootings that left one person seriously injured in Toronto’s east end on Wednesday night.

Premier Doug Ford's government will not support a New Democrat's bill to make the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation a statutory holiday in the province, the Indigenous affairs minister said Thursday.

What could have possibly been Sheila Rizzuto’s last vacation ever was ruined after she fell out of an Air Canada-provided wheelchair and badly injured herself, according to her husband.

Calgary police say a pedestrian was hit and killed while crossing Elbow Drive S.W. on Wednesday evening.

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith says the province is ready to take border security into its own hands.

Many shoppers are avoiding expensive cuts or buying smaller quantities of meat.

The City of Ottawa will begin the final phase of the graduated approach to enforcing the city’s new three-item garbage limit on Monday, leaving behind any extra items not in a yellow bag.

Gio Petti put together a documentary on OC Transpo, asking how we got here. How did a city that was once lauded as an example of how to do transit right, and that boasted some of the highest per capita transit ridership numbers in the country, become a system that now elicits so much frustration from users?

Santa Claus visits Ottawa and eastern Ontario, the Ottawa Black Bears play their first game and Christmas market season continues. CTVNewsOttawa.ca looks at things to do in Ottawa and eastern Ontario this weekend.

New details suggest that there were communication issues between the pilots of a charter flight and the control tower at Montreal's Mirabel airport when a Boeing 737 made an emergency landing on Wednesday.

As Australia moves to ban social media for children under 16, Quebec is debating whether to follow suit.

For the third week in a row, some 3,000 workers at daycares in Quebec are expected go on strike for a few hours.

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith says the province is ready to take border security into its own hands.

Postal workers in Edmonton are holding their picket lines as the Canada Post strike nears its third week.

The union representing Canada Post workers says the Crown corporation has been laying off striking employees as the labour action by more than 55,000 workers approaches the two-week mark.

School cancellations and delays in the Marititmes for Friday, Nov. 29

Residents of Chipman, N.B., are expressing their shock after the bodies of two people were found inside a burning vehicle in the community this week.

Gas prices change in all three Maritime provinces.

The Hanover School Division is laying off 93 educational assistants, citing an "unexpected loss of federal funding for Jordan's Principle programming."

Proposed developments and new businesses opening are fueling optimism for some on a revival of downtown Winnipeg, but some business owners say the present remains problematic.

Visitors to the Winnipeg Art Gallery-Qaumajuq may soon see some brand new art hanging on its walls.

The prosecution has presented their closing remarks against Ruben Manz to a 13-person jury, bringing an end to arguments before their sequestering.

Kavis Drake, 18, and Denim Ross, 20, won the average in last year’s Maple Leaf Finals Rodeo team roping event at Agribition. The two were the youngest competitors in 2023 and are once again in their event this year.

The Crown and defence presented sentencing submissions at Saskatchewan Provincial Court on Thursday, in the case of a woman who pleaded guilty to defrauding Regina Mobile Crisis Services.

Waterloo Regional Police are investigating a fatal shooting in Cambridge.

Brody Robinson was found without vital signs in his cell at Millhaven Institution the evening of Oct. 29. He was 23-years-old.

Winter finally arrives this week in southern Ontario. Environment Canada is forecasting flurries and snow squalls almost every day.

Environment Canada has issued an extreme cold warning for parts of central Saskatchewan, including Saskatoon, on Thursday.

The provincial government says increases to crop insurance claims later in the growing season are a main reason for Thursday’s mid-year deficit forecast of $743.5 million, which is up more than $470 million from the budget.

Most of the main roads in Saskatoon are cleared, but feeder streets and residential roads are a different story.

A region in northern Ontario has been chosen as the site to hold Canada's nuclear waste in a deep geological repository.

A battle with bed bugs continues at 217 Pine St. North in Timmins, according to a tenant who has lived there for a year and a half.

Di Brina Family Holdings announced Thursday it is donating $1 million to the Health Sciences North Foundation.

City hall is once again considering changes to when Dundas Place transforms into a pedestrian-only street, but the city councillor representing Downtown London doesn’t think the time is right for scheduling weekly closures to traffic.

Six different goal scorers found the back of the net for London, while goalie Alexei Medvedev made 31-saves for the shutout.

Anja Vandervlies and Michelle Stein could hardly believe it when they heard South Bruce was not going to host Canada’s first permanent storage facility for nuclear waste.

Environment Canada has released snow squall warnings and watches for our region.

See current school bus cancellations by school board from across the region.

Several police officers and city staff attended a homeless encampment in Barrie’s south end on Thursday morning to inform the individuals living there they would have to vacate the area.

Windsor police officers have charged one man with 29 offences and they are seeking a second suspect in a kidnapping and extortion investigation.

Windsor police say a 47-year-old man is facing impaired driving charges after going the wrong way on the E.C. Row Expressway.

Chatham-Kent approved a 4.99 per cent budget increase on Wednesday following two budget deliberation meetings. Based on the average household with an assessment value of $176,200, homeowners will pay an additional $176.

The Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) has confirmed a case of avian flu has been detected in Greater Victoria, on the Saanich Peninsula.

Hundreds of people on B.C.'s Penelakut Island are staring down a winter without their essential food stores.

Authorities are asking for the public’s help tracking down at least two suspects who used a stolen Dodge pickup to steal a second Dodge truck in Greater Victoria this month.

The Western Hockey League's Kelowna Rockets will host the Memorial Cup in the spring of 2026, the Canadian Hockey League said Wednesday.

Mounties with the BC Highway Patrol in Kelowna say they've impounded more than 545 vehicles for excessive speed and aggressive driving so far this year. That works out to more than 1.6 per day.

Police are appealing for information on a targeted shooting that resulted in the hospitalization of a man in Kamloops.

The Lethbridge Hurricanes’ Wall of Honour will be getting a little more crowded.

The Christmas spirit was on full display Thursday morning inside Toys "R" Us thanks to the team from Avonlea Homes, who spent their morning buying toys and gifts for Lethbridge Family Services’ Angel Tree Campaign.

On November 17, 2019, 26-year-old Marshal Iwaasa left his mother's home in Lethbridge and told his family he was driving to Calgary.

Kiiwetinoong MPP Sol Mamakwa wants to make Sept. 30 a statutory holiday in Ontario.

A heavy Ontario Provincial Police presence in the area of Rabbit Island Road and Thomas Road in Wabozominissing, Wikwemikong Unceded Territory has ended, the OPP said Thursday afternoon.

Ontario Health Minister Sylvia Jones says improvements to the Northern Health Travel Grant are coming as soon as this weekend.

People in Nunavut and northern Labrador have been writing to Canadian government officials this year to say grocers were charging exorbitant prices despite receiving a federal subsidy.

A Newfoundland energy company's embrace of data centres is raising doubts about eastern Canadian hopes of harnessing the region's howling winds to supply Germany with power from green hydrogen.

An international group led by a Canadian is in Rome this week to push the Catholic Church to adopt a zero-tolerance policy on abuse by clergy.

A young history buff was able to reunite a Guelph, Ont. woman with letters written by her husband almost 80 years ago.

Twice a week, Joanne and Jeff Jonah fill up their vehicle full of snacks and sandwiches and deliver them to the homeless in downtown Moncton, N.B.

It's considered lucky to live to be 100, but often when you hit that milestone, you're faced with significant mobility issues. Not Winnipeg's Jack Mudry. The centenarian regularly walks five blocks to get where he wants to go, the care home where his wife Stella lives.

Several hungry raccoons were chased off a B.C. couple’s deck this week by one over-confident house cat – who was ultimately lucky to saunter away unscathed.

Sunday night was a big night for the Trailer Park Boys, as Ricky, Julian and Bubbles hosted an advanced screening of their new movie in Dartmouth, N.S.

Andrea Arnold is used to having to slow down to let deer cross the road in her Northern B.C. community. But this weekend she saw something that made her pull over and snap a photo.

Every single item misplaced on a bus or ferry in the Halifax Regional Municipality ends up in a small office at the Halifax Transit Bridge Terminal in Dartmouth, N.S.

A new public opinion survey has found that 40 per cent of Torontonians don’t feel safe, while half reported that the quality of life in the city has worsened over the last year.

Edmonton's theatre community is in mourning after an actor died during a performance of "A Christmas Carol" at the Citadel Theatre on Sunday.

The federal government's five-page piece of legislation to enact Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's promised two-month tax break on a range of consumer goods over the holidays passed in the House of Commons late Thursday.

Former Bank of Canada governor David Dodge says the Liberal government’s proposed GST holiday, as well as their plan to send $250 cheque to 18.7 million working Canadians, is a 'bad package.'

The Supreme Court of Canada will weigh the constitutionality of legislation that limits members of a spy watchdog from using their parliamentary immunity to speak out.

Cuddling on the couch with her dog, Ducky, no one would notice that anything is different about Ashley King. Even when she walks across the living room, she doesn’t miss a step. But the 32-year-old has gotten used to functioning with only two per cent vision.

Sleeping and waking up at different times is associated with an increased risk of heart attack and stroke, even for people who get the recommended amount of sleep, according to new research.

The Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) has published an update to a recent national recall on organic carrot brands over E. coli contamination risks.

As Australia moves to ban social media for children under 16, Quebec is debating whether to follow suit.

Air Canada is rolling out facial recognition technology at the gate, making it the first Canadian airline to deploy the software in a bid to make the boarding process smoother.

The Competition Bureau is suing Google over alleged anticompetitive conduct in the tech giant's online advertising business and wants the company to sell off two of its services and pay a penalty.

Ticketless Taylor Swift fans hoping for a "Taylgate" party in Vancouver are out of luck.

Members of NewJeans, one of the most popular K-pop groups, said on Thursday that they were leaving their agency ADOR, a subsidiary of powerhouse label HYBE.

The Super Bowl pregame will have some Louisiana flavor: Multi-talented performer Jon Batiste will hit the stage to sing the national anthem, while Trombone Shorty and Lauren Daigle are slated to perform “America the Beautiful.”

The Canadian Federation of Independent Business is asking the federal government to compensate small businesses for the costs to implement the two-month long GST holiday.

Canadian businesses are about two weeks away from having to scrap some of the tax they charge customers, but many have already realized that's no easy feat.

After weeks of plugging increasingly inviting discounts, retailers in the United States and several other countries are preparing for prime time: Black Friday, the bargain bonanza that still reigns as the unofficial kickoff of the holiday shopping season even if it's lost some luster.

A budgeting expert says there are a number of ways shoppers can avoid getting enveloped by the sales frenzy and resist spending beyond their means.

In the remotest reaches of Alaska, there’s no relying on DoorDash to have Thanksgiving dinner — or any dinner — delivered. But some residents living well off the grid nevertheless have turkeys this holiday, thanks to the Alaska Turkey Bomb.

It’s a Thanksgiving miracle for one California family after a man who went missing in 1999 was found 25 years later when his sister saw a photo of him in an online article, authorities said.

Canada will finish out the year at a career-high in the FIFA rankings after climbing four places to No. 31.

Interim coach Cindy Tye is expecting a stiff challenge Friday when the sixth-ranked Canadians take on No. 13 Iceland in an international women's soccer friendly in Spain.

Five-time Grand Slam champion Iga Swiatek accepted a one-month suspension after testing positive for the banned substance trimetazidine, a heart medication known as TMZ, the International Tennis Integrity Agency announced Thursday.

Hyundai is recalling hundreds of thousands of SUVs and small cars in the U.S. and Canada because the rearview camera image may not show up on the screens.

An auto industry leader says U.S. president-elect Donald Trump's threat of tariffs on Canadian goods would have devastating effects for the sector, forcing both Canadian and U.S. consumers to pay higher prices.

A new survey finds fewer drivers intend to make their next car purchase an electric vehicle.

© 2024 All rights reserved. Use of this Website assumes acceptance of Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy

source

Leave a Comment

WP2Social Auto Publish Powered By : XYZScripts.com