CIC News
May 19, 2015
More
than 40,000 Filipinos became permanent residents of Canada in 2014, making the
Philippines the top source country for Canadian immigration last year. The
Philippines had previously been the top source country in 2012, with China
having been the top source country in 2013.
Canada also issued nearly 47,000 visitor visas to Filipinos in
2014, a 56 percent increase since 2006.
The
number of new permanent residents from the Philippines is up from 14,004 in
2004, a near three-fold increase in just one decade. Many of the Filipino
newcomers originally came to Canada under the Live-In Caregiver Program, now
simply the Caregiver Program after modifications made last
November. The government of Canada’s immigration plan for 2015
states that it aims to convert between 26,000 and 30,000 caregivers to
permanent resident status this year.
In
just a few short decades, Canada’s Filipino community has grown to become one of
the country’s largest immigrant demographics. The more than 700,000 people of
Filipino descent in Canada make up one of the country’s larger diaspora
communities, and this number is increasing constantly.
Filipino workers in
Canada are important to both the Canadian and Philippine economies. While
workers in Canada help to fill important labour shortages, families and friends
in the Philippines benefit from remittances sent from Canada.
About
half of Canada’s Filipino population lives in the Greater Toronto Area (GTA),
with Vancouver hosting the second-largest Filipino population in Canada and
Winnipeg also home to a large number of Filipinos.
“Oftentimes,
individuals will first come to Canada as temporary workers, leaving spouses and
children behind. But many Filipinos have also worked hard to bring their
immediate families to Canada. Once permanent residence is achieved, they are
then able to reunite with their families in Canada,” says Attorney David Cohen.
“Canada’s
generous family sponsorship rules allow permanent residents to sponsor not only
children and spouses, but parents and grandparents as well. These include the
popular Parent and
Grandparent Sponsorship Program as well as the new Super Visa
Program, which offers long-term visitor visas to qualified
applicants. The introduction of these family reunification programs has
contributed to the upsurge in new arrivals from the Philippines.
“Within
the broader Filipino community in Canada, we have observed success after
success of smaller communities that have flourished across the country. The
story of Filipino immigration to Canada is a story shared between a proud
people and a welcoming land.”
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