immigrantscanada.com

Independent topical source of current affairs, opinion and issues, featuring stories making news in Canada from immigrants, newcomers, minorities & ethnic communities' point of view and interests.

direction: Maybe you even got as far as dragging them out of the cupboards where they've been hidden for years, according to The Chronicle Herald. Now they're on the dining room table and all of a sudden you become overwhelmed. You want to put them in books and pass them down to the kids. Instead of putting them all back in their hiding places, Melissa Fillmore can take you in the right direction. Or, she can actually do it for you. She's the young entrepreneur behind Past to Present Photos and helps people organize all those memories. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

curated glimpse: Light flickers, according to The Chronicle Herald. This is The Flow, an art installation by New Delhi-based artist Subba Ghosh, a work inspired by the world's ongoing refugee crisis, and the millions of people driven from their homes by conflict and poverty. The sound of crashing waves fills your ears. Human displacement, the suffering of refugees and the notion of identity dominated the 2018 India Art Fair, an important platform for contemporary artists that provides a carefully curated glimpse into the South Asian art scene through the years. Paintings, experimental photographs, abstract expressionist art and mixed-media projects pushed the boundaries of form, filling a sprawling fair grounds in the heart of the Indian capital. The themes are universal, the artistic expressions deeply personal. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

dreamer immigrants: He writes This will be our last chance, there will never be another opportunity! March 5th, according to Toronto Star. Trump was referring to a deadline after which he has said a program protecting young immigrants from deportation would end. In a tweet Tuesday, Trump asserts that Democrats and Republicans must act now to provide legal protections to young Dreamer immigrants in the U.S. illegally. In fact, a recent court ruling has rendered that deadline meaningless. In addition to protections for Dreamers, Trump also wants 25 billion U.S. for a border wall with Mexico and other security measures, as well as curbs on legal immigration. The Senate's Republican and Democratic leaders say it's going to be tough to broker a successful deal on immigration policy. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

gas station: Her parents were here, according to Toronto Star. Her father Jong Jim Kim, who came to America and worked at a gas station, pointed at himself and said, American dream! She made people's hearts sing. She is 17, Korean-American, the child of first-generation immigrants, tweeting between her fearless, soaring, never-satisfied halfpipe runs at greatness at the Pyeongchang Olympics. And in a spare moment I was reading about Syed A. Jamal, a 55-year-old Bangladesh-born chemistry professor in Lawrence, Kan., who arrived in America legally 30 years ago, overstayed his visa but built a life. Then they warned his crying wife and children, ages 7 to 14, that they could be arrested if they tried to hug him goodbye, and drove off with him. This section stood out Immigration agents handcuffed a beloved chemistry professor as he was leaving his home to drive his daughter to school. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

immigration policies: The charges are similar to a conviction that the jury did return being a felon in possession of a gun leading to a three-year jail sentence, according to Metro News. Garcia Zarate's attorneys, J. Tony Serra and Maria Belyi, argue that the federal charges are politically motivated and are asking for the case to be thrown out. Federal prosecutors charged Jose Ines Garcia Zarate with two counts of illegal gun possession in November after jurors in California court found him not guilty of killing Kate Steinle in 2015. Short of dismissal, they say the two federal charges should be combined into one. President Donald Trump and others in his administration have repeatedly pointed to Steinle's death as a reason for toughening the country's immigration policies. Garcia Zarate acknowledged holding the gun that killed Steinle but said it fired accidentally when he found it wrapped in a T-shirt under a bench on a popular San Francisco pier, where she was walking with her father. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

march deadline: The headlines about immigration make people feel like they're really in the spotlight, according to Metro News. Kids are more afraid for their families than they are for themselves, said Jane Slater, a teacher at Sequoia High School in Redwood City who advises a club for students who are in the country without legal permission. College counsellors say the decline reflects increasing distrust of government among immigrant families, as well as uncertainty over the status of the federal Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program better known as DACA, the newspaper said. With the March 1 deadline approaching, 19,141 students had applied for aid under the California Dream Act as of Monday, a number that's just over half of last year's total. This year's decline follows a dip that occurred last year until state officials launched a campaign and ended up with a total of 36,127 applications. Available aid for qualifying students includes private scholarships funded through public universities, state administered financial aid, university grants, community college fee waivers and Cal Grants. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

mattis: Some governments have expressed little interest in having such militants returned, according to CBC. Alleged ISIS operative 'Jihadi Jack' begs Canada to let him come here We're gathering up hundreds of detainees, Mattis told reporters traveling with him. Doing nothing is not an option, Mattis said following a conference of defence ministers in Rome that discussed the issue without resolving it. The important thing is that the countries of origin keep responsibility for them. But the bottom line is, we don't want them going back on the street. How they carry out that responsibility, there's a dozen diplomatic, legal or whatever ways. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

renewal requests: He said his order does not require the government to grant any particular DACA applications or renewal requests, according to Metro News. The ruling came in lawsuits brought by immigration rights groups and 15 states and the District of Columbia. The Trump administration should be able to alter the policies and priorities set by its predecessor, Garaufis said. Justice Department spokesman Devin O'Malley said the order doesn't change the government's position that DACA was an unlawful circumvention of Congress. Attorney General Jeff Sessions has said then-President Barack Obama's decision to implement DACA was an unconstitutional exercise of authority. DACA was implemented unilaterally after Congress declined to extend these benefits to this same group of illegal aliens, he said.O'Malley added that the Department of Homeland Security acted within its lawful authority in deciding to wind down DACA in an orderly manner and looked forward to vindicating its position in future litigation. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

opportunity march: Wouldn't it be great if we could finally, after so many years, solve the DACA puzzle, he wrote, adding This will be our last chance, there will never be another opportunity! March 5th, according to CTV. Trump was referring to a deadline he announced last year to end a program protecting young immigrants from deportation. Trump, in an early-morning tweet, said Congress must act now to provide legal protections to young Dreamer immigrants even as legislation faces an uncertain prospect in Congress. But a recent court ruling has rendered that deadline all but meaningless. Both parties' leaders hope debate can be concluded this week, but it's unclear if that will happen or what the product, if any, will be. The comments came the day after the Senate voted 97-1 -- Ted Cruz, R-Texas, provided the sole no vote -- to plunge into an open-ended immigration debate that's been promised by McConnell. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

romans: Teacher Vanessa Romans got the idea from her own childhood, when she took German classes, according to CTV. I said to them, How would you like to write in Arabic ', and they went, Like, what This is English class,' said Romans. Students at Kildonan-East Collegiate wrote stories for a book called Dual Language Stories'. It tells tales in both their mother tongues and English. She said the response was unlike anything she's ever seen. Like, non-stop working. They were working. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

tom commitment: But the NDP leader indicated Tuesday that the costs of the pharmacare program, at least, could be covered if the Liberals close a controversial tax loophole for stock options, which critics say benefits the wealthy, and crack down on tax havens, according to National Observer. The government has shown that it just doesn't get it when it comes to what workers are going through, Singh said. Singh has distanced himself from Tom Mulcair's commitment that an NDP government would stick to a balanced budget, saying as recently as last week that he opposes austerity and supports stimulus funding when required. While they've said a lot of fancy words on addressing inequality, they haven't yet produced the results that people need now. On the surface, Singh's demands look like the foundation of a possible NDP platform for the 2019 election. The NDP had sponsored an opposition motion echoing their leader's demands for action on the so-called stock-option deduction and tax havens in the budget, but the Liberals voted it down. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

hundreds rally: The AP also erroneously reported that Ragbir was required to check in with immigration officials Saturday, according to Metro News. He had originally faced that requirement, but it was lifted by federal officials.A corrected version of the story is below Hundreds rally in NYC against deportation of activist Hundreds of people have rallied in New York City in support of an immigration activist facing deportation By DAVID JEANSAssociated Press Hundreds of people rallied on Saturday in support of an immigration activist from Trinidad and Tobago who's fighting deportation, accusing authorities of targeting him for speaking out. It was not issued by a judge in Newark. Ravi Ragbir was facing removal from the United States on Saturday. New Sanctuary Coalition of New York City, a coalition of 150 faith-based, pro-immigrant groups, staged the rally at a federal office in lower Manhattan where Ragbir, 53, had been scheduled to check in on Saturday with immigration officials before they decided he didn't need to. But federal officials and Ragbir's lawyers agreed to a temporary stay as part of a lawsuit filed Friday, which claims he and other activists have been singled out. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

december judgment: Thereafter, the defendant seems to then engage in a sort of vicious cycle in terms of continuing to offer work to these translators as an incentive to wait for payment, says the December judgment in the small claims case, according to Toronto Star. As well, translators are made to feel if they do not accept the work they will have to wait longer to get paid. In a judgment against Able Translations, which has enjoyed contracts with the Workplace Safety and Insurance Board and University Health Network among others, judge Laura Oliver said the company aggressively targets newly trained translators who are new to Canada and looking to start a new life in a new country. In an emailed statement to the Star, a spokesperson for Able said the company wasn't notified of the small claims case and was therefore unable to defend itself. The Star first wrote about Able Translations alleged payment issues in 2015, and then again in 2017. Able said it will challenge the decision. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

ice officers: Officials at the agency commonly known as ICE praise Trump for putting teeth back into immigration enforcement, and they say their agency continues to prioritize national security threats and violent criminals, much as the Obama administration did, according to Toronto Star. But as ICE officers get wider latitude to determine whom they detain, the biggest jump in arrests has been of immigrants with no criminal convictions. And after he took office, arrests by Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers surged 40 per cent. The agency made 37,734 noncriminal arrests in the government's 2017 fiscal year, more than twice the number in the previous year. Critics say ICE is increasingly grabbing at the lowest-hanging fruit of deportation-eligible immigrants to meet the president's unrealistic goals, replacing a targeted system with a scattershot approach aimed at boosting the agency's enforcement statistics.ICE has not carried out mass roundups or major workplace raids under Trump, but nearly every week brings a contentious new arrest. The category includes suspects facing possible charges as well as those without criminal records. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

immigration agreement: There was even ribbing when Schumer presented McConnell with a bottle of bourbon made in his home New York City borough of Brooklyn, according to Metro News. McConnell, whose state knows a thing or two about bourbon, proclaimed, There's no such thing as Brooklyn bourbon. We really do get along, despite what you read in the press, said Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., at a previously scheduled appearance alongside his counterpart, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., at the University of Louisville. But just days after the two leaders brokered a bipartisan 400 billion budget agreement and helped shepherd it into law, both men made clear that an immigration agreement will be tough. He said while Democrats have called for swift action on immigration, Now's the time to back up the talk with the hard work of finding a solution. The time for political posturing is behind us, McConnell said later Monday on the Senate floor. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

jordan: Jordan is believed to have deported several thousand refugees since last year, mostly on security grounds, according to Metro News. Rights groups have said deportations often take place quickly, without a thorough investigation. Filippo Grandi also said that the number of Syrians being deported from Jordan to their war-ravaged homeland decreased dramatically in recent months, in part because of his agency's appeal for more careful reviews of cases. Only about 15,000 Syrian refugees, out of close to 660,000 registered in Jordan, have opted to leave the kingdom for Syria since 2016, Grandi said during a tour of the Zaatari refugee camp. Why Because people don't feel secure, he said. So it's a very small number. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

refugee camps: He was born and raised in Yangon, Myanmar's biggest city and far from the western state of Rakhine, where bloody military operations that followed Rohingya militant attacks in August have driven nearly 700,000 Rohingya into refugee camps in Bangladesh, according to The Chronicle Herald. When we first saw those pictures, we started laughing. For the 41-year-old Rohingya man, it was a surreal moment. We wondered When will it be our turn to have our pictures in the paper Muddinn, a teacher, said in an interview in his Yangon home. The pictures are the latest in a series of chilling realizations for the Rohingya minority here. Behind the laughter, though, there is genuine fear. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

selection system: According to the latest immigration data, a total of 101,107 eligible applicants were entered into the candidate pool from January to November, 2016, when Ottawa changed its selection system that ranks them and invites those who make the cut-off in each draw to apply for immigration under the economic class, according to Toronto Star. Draws are held multiple times each year. With the tweaking of criteria by the federal government more than a year ago, applicants with backgrounds in industrial, electrical and construction trades have become less competitive while international students are getting a boost because their Canadian education is now worth more. In the six months after the introduction of changes that included drastically reducing the bonus points awarded to candidates with job offers, 77,207 were entered into the pool. Before the changes, almost 40 per cent of those invited to apply for immigration had a job offer. Although the 2017 total of candidates is not yet available, it's bound to surpass the total from the year before. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

settlement products: A more moderate Palestine Resolution renewing the NDP's commitment to peace and justice has been endorsed by two dozen riding associations, according to Rabble. The motion mostly restates official Canadian policy, except that it calls for banning settlement products from Canadian markets, and using other forms of diplomatic and economic pressure to end the occupation. The NDP Socialist Caucus has submitted a resolution calling on the party to actively campaign in support of the demand of Palestinian unions, civil society and unions across Canada and around the world which call for Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions against the Israeli state until it dismantles the apartheid wall, allows refugees to return home, ends its demolition of Palestinian homes and olive groves, lifts the siege of Gaza, ends its occupation of Palestinian lands, and terminates its apartheid practices. Already the Canadian Jewish News, Electronic Intifada, National Post, Ottawa Jewish Bulletin, Toronto Star, Le Devoir, Mondoweiss, Canada Talks Israel Palestine and rabble.ca have published stories regarding the resolutions. Party insiders will no doubt do everything in their power to avoid discussing the Socialist Caucus BDS resolution and will probably seek to block the Palestine Resolution from being debated publicly on the convention floor. The Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs has called on the party leader to push back against marginal elements within the party promoting Palestinian rights while the Canadian Friends of Simon Wiesenthal has Urged NDP to Disallow Anti-Israel Resolution at Upcoming corporate-media-focused party operatives may heed the CIJA/Wiesenthal call. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

rating: Striding onstage with her purse slung over her shoulder and a marvelous honky-tonk backing band some with ZZ Top-worthy beards the soft-spoken June greeted the audience with a near inaudible Happy to see you again, according to NOW Magazine. Bathed in magenta lights, the Tennessee singer/songwriter immediately dove in. Rating NNNNSometimes it's worth braving snow and ice to be part of something special, and that was the case at Valerie June's Queen Elizabeth Theatre concert on Sunday. For much of the night, she remained a woman of few words, letting her powerful pipes and gorgeous songs do the heavy lifting. Her whimsical, uninhibited delivery let her register morph between childlike innocence and world-weary wisdom, one roof-raising song after another. While known for her deeply distinctive voice and songs that draw from country, blues, gospel and Appalachian folk, she has a disarmingly wailing drawl and Tennessee twang in a live setting. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

compassion gr: The organization dates back to 1928 when it became the city's first non-profit social services agency for families, set up in response to a survey of child welfare services in B.C. that identified the need.article continues below Trending Stories Shaughnessy Canuck Place house has dark historyrelatedA lesson in compassion Gr. 4 students raise money for at-risk youth More support needed for B.C. kids waiting for adoption Dr, according to Vancouver Courier. GF George Frederick Strong was a key player in its beginnings, according to CEO Karin Kirkpatrick, while Mary McPhedran was the founding executive director for what was then known as the Central Welfare Bureau. That's what Family Services of Greater Vancouver learned looking through its history in preparation for its 90th anniversary Feb. 15. A donated second-hand car was sold for 25 to fund its launch. Mary McPhedran was the founding executive director for what was then called the Central Welfare Bureau. The office was in Vancouver's Dominion Building, and it opened its doors with a single case worker. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

creek plan: His parents split when he was 2 1/2, and he never fully fit in with either of their families after they remarried.article continues below Trending Stories Vancouver police officer going for Olympic gold Proposal for building with innovative design goes to public hearing Feb. 20Court hears harrowing tales of youth prostitution victims Council approves ambitious Northeast False Creek plan He's tight with his two older siblings, a brother and sister, but they haven't all been together for eight years, since before the war, according to Vancouver Courier. So imagine how the 25-year-old feels knowing the three of them will be reunited in Canada soon. Even before the war in Syria, he didn't have the dream mom-dad-and-the-kids upbringing. And imagine how it felt, after years of living alone as an unwanted refugee, to be embraced by a brand-new, instant family of two dozen strangers when he got off the plane in Victoria in June. That was a shock, honestly, he says. It wasn't just his cousin ish Julie Angus more about her later who met him at the airport, but the entire Fairfield group sponsoring him here. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

movies trudeau: Local coverage of the prime minister's visit to California has focused on U.S. President Donald Trump's talk and actions on immigration, a particularly acute issue in this blue state on the border with Mexico and home to the largest population of Canadians outside of Canada, some 150,000 people, according to National Observer. And Trudeau's talk Friday night at the Ronald Reagan library was overshadowed with international headlines about a crash between an SUV and a motorcycle officer in the prime minister's motorcade. Standing at the Griffith Observatory in the Los Angeles hills a site made famous as a setting in multiple movies Trudeau said his pitch to save the North American Free Trade Agreement from falling apart was well received. ; Behind Trudeau, a cloudy California sky obscured the city's most famous message the Hollywood Sign. The California Highway Patrol officer broke his clavicle in the accident. The conversations I've had across this country over these past few days have been extremely positive, the prime minister said on Saturday morning. Trudeau said Canadians needed to continually remind Americans about the bilateral relationship between the two countries, which can often be taken for granted. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

seniors: According to them, the plan systematically excludes specific groups of seniors by using unilingual online surveys, holding consultations during one of the coldest months of the year and choosing locations that are difficult to access with public transit, according to National Observer. The people who are being excluded from the public consultation are precisely those who are most in need of an age friendly city' . The first concern appears to be less of an issue, since the website clearly stipulates that if anyone needs help filling out the online survey in either French or English there's both a phone number and an email address available. The Val rie Plante administration's recently announced decision to hold public consultations in the middle of winter, ahead of a new Municipal Action Plan for Seniors 2018-2020 that aims to make the city more age friendly, left members of two Concordia University-based research organizations scratching their heads. ; In a bid to raise public awareness and gain the city's attention on this issue, Ageing, Communication, Technologies ACT and the Centre for Research on Aging engAGE published an open letter to the Mayor of Montreal outlining their concerns and calling for immediate changes in order to build a better and more inclusive consultation process that would, in turn, lead to a better Action Plan. The other two concerns, however, could potentially be major obstacles to a truly inclusive consultation process. Bad timing, bad locations First off, what able-bodied youngish bunch of bureaucrats at City Hall decided that holding a consultation process involving senior citizens in the middle of winter was a smart idea There is nothing an older person fears more than a severe fall, which at their age can lead to serious complications and quickly turn into a life-or-death situation. An image from the City of Montreal's Plan d'action municipal pour les personnes a n es 2018-2020. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

art: The local hotel now houses about 80 African asylum-seekers who were assigned to live there when they arrived in Italy, according to Toronto Star. But restaurant owner Davide Midali saw promise in both his village and its new residents. But financial issues kept the lifts closed this winter. To lure tourists back, he set out to build igloos that could be rented overnight, like ones he had seen in Sweden. When some of them saw me creating these blocks of snow, they voluntarily decided to give a hand to reach a common goal, Midali said. That's how a handful of immigrants unaccustomed to the cold picked up the art of igloo-making. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

canadian citizenship: Abdi's lawyer, Benjamin Perryman, said federal officials are pushing for a deportation hearing to go forward, after turning down the 24-year-old's request to have the process put on hold while he pursues a constitutional challenge, according to CTV. A deportation order automatically strips Mr. Abdi, who never got Canadian citizenship while growing up in foster care in Nova Scotia, was detained by the Canada Border Services Agency after serving five years in prison for multiple offences, including aggravated assault. Abdi of his permanent resident status, including the right to work and the right to health care, Perryman said in a statement Sunday. Abdi argues he will be irreparably harmed if he is stripped of his rights before having the merits of his court case decided. Mr. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.