A group of foreign workers who allege they were lured to Canada under false pretences say the federal government has reneged on a promise to help them get work permits. The Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada logo is seen in this undated handout. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO
A group of foreign workers who allege they were lured to Canada under false pretences say the federal government has reneged on a promise to help them get work permits. The Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada logo is seen in this undated handout. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO
MONTREAL - Foreign workers who allege they were lured to Montreal under false pretences say they're unable to gets jobs in the country or return home because the federal government reneged on a promise to help them get work permits.
The workers say the federal Immigration Department told them they would be fast-tracked for permits through a program that helps victims of human trafficking and that they were provided with a simplified application process and a guarantee they would be approved quickly.
But last week, Ottawa allegedly rescinded on its offer after approving seven of the 100 applications.
The workers say they've now been told they have to apply through the regular process, with more complex applications required, unknown wait times and no guarantees that they will be approved.
"We're stuck," Karim Outioua, one of the workers, said in an interview earlier this week. "They told us they would give us accelerated open work permits and, after, they told us we have to wait."
Octavio Zambrano said he and the others can't find jobs because they don't have work permits — and don't want to work illegally. They are running out of money for food and rent, he said, adding that he is owed three weeks' back pay.
He said that he and many of his colleagues don't have the money to return to their countries of origin, adding that some of his former colleagues from Mexico borrowed money to pay for their flights to Canada and could be in danger if they return without the funds to pay back those loans.
But lawyers for the Workers Centre said in a letter to the Immigration Department last week that without the expedited process, applying for the work permits will require a level of resources that is "unfathomable and absurd in the circumstances." More delays, it said, could lead to a humanitarian crisis.
A spokeswoman for Immigration Minister Marc Miller declined to comment, citing privacy legislation.
CNESST, the agency that enforces Quebec labour standards, said in an email that it is particularly sensitive to the workers' situation and is actively working on the case, but it declined to comment further.
This report by ºÃÉ«tvwas first published Nov. 16, 2023.