Singh promises bump to Quebec's immigration funds to address labour shortage
Approximately 120,000 jobs in the province left vacant
NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh says his government would give a boost to Quebec's immigration funding to help prepare immigrants to fill the province's labour shortage.
At an announcement in Drummondville, Que., on Saturday, Singh promised to increase the federal immigration transfer payment to Quebec by $73 million per year to improve settlement services for newcomers, if he is elected prime minister.
The province has been dealing with a labour shortage, with more than four per cent of all jobs in Quebec left vacant for four months or longer, according to a Canadian Federation of Independent Business report. That's roughly 120,000 jobs.
"Quebec is dealing with a serious labour shortage, and needs immigration to help meet the challenge," said Singh.
"It's a critical issue."
The NDP's platform also commits to bolstering immigration settlement in rural areas of Quebec. Many immigrants arrive in Quebec with no French language skills, which affects their ability to work in the province. Singh said that a funding increase from an NDP government would help to target those language barriers.
Quebec will already receive $25.5 billion from Ottawa this fiscal year in the form equalization payments and health and social transfers. In the 2017-2018 fiscal year, $490 million was allocated for immigration supports.
But the provincial government isn't completely sold on the idea of increasing immigration.
Leaning on temporary foreign workers
The CAQ government intends to accept around 20 per cent fewer immigrants this year, or 40,000 instead of the nearly 52,000 accepted last year.
However, Premier François Legault said temporary foreign workers can counter the shortage.
His government recently launched a $21-million plan to make it simpler for smaller businesses to recruit foreigners. It includes subsidizing recruitment missions by Quebec companies overseas and offering to cover $1,000 in moving expenses for the workers.
The province also announced $34 million for measures aimed at better integrating immigrants into the workforce.