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.

editorial budget: We 're not just relying on official press releases to bring you the story, according to Georgia Asian. We 're there and making our own observations. '; guardish ' We 're able to put extra resources into this story only because a few thousand Tyee readers pitch in to our editorial budget every single month. '; guardish ' We want to be able to say 'yes ' to covering the most important stories, even if it 's expensive to do so. Will you chip in to help The Tyee is one of the few news organization in the country that has a reporter on the ground as this story unfolds. Will you help us be able to say yes Help make independent reporting happen. The need for fact-based, rigorous reporting is more important than ever. '; guardish ' In response to the unprecedented public health crisis presented by the novel coronavirus, we 've doubled our daily publishing output. Click here to join Tyee Builders now. '; else if seconds 30 times call for extraordinary reporting. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

pre-pandemic level: The unemployment rate fell to 12.3 per cent after hitting a record-high of 13.7 per cent in May, according to CTV. As in May, even though more people found jobs, more people also looked for work as the labour force grew by about 786,000 after a gain of 491,000 in May, bringing it to within 443,000 of its pre-pandemic level. Statistics Canada's labour force survey released Friday showed 953,000 jobs were added last month, including 488,000 full-time and 465,000 part-time positions. Newsletter sign-up Get The COVID-19 Brief sent to your inbox Statistics Canada said the unemployment rate would have been 16.3 per cent had it included in unemployment counts those who wanted to work, but did not look for a job. It didn't include any gains in Toronto as restrictions in that city loosened after the survey week. Job gains were made in every province, including by 378,000 in Ontario, marking the first increase since the COVID-19 shutdown, Statistics Canada said. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

refugee girls: In a statement to CTV News, Morneau's office said that there is absolutely no link between his daughters' involvements with the charity and any work that WE does with the Government of Canada, according to CTV. The statement confirmed what website Canadaland first reported that the finance minister's daughter Clare has spoken at WE events, and his daughter Grace is currently employed by WE Charity. Now, the NDP are calling for an ethics investigation. Clare has spoken at WE events, as well as many other public events, in the context of the release of her book on young refugee girls. As well, Morneau's daughter Grace is a contractual employee of WE in an administrative role in the travel department, a job she has had since 2019 following her internship, according to Morneau's office. She has never been compensated for that work, said Maeva Proteau, press secretary for Morneau. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

robert unanue: Goya was founded in Manhattan in 1936 by Prudencio Unanue and his wife Carolina, immigrants from Spain, according to CTV. The company calls itself the largest Hispanic-owned food company in the United States. The company that makes products used in many Hispanic cuisines, but whose following extends well outside of that range, is getting some backlash after its CEO praised President Donald Trump at a White House event. Robert Unanue, a grandson and now Goya CEO, spoke at a Rose Garden event announcing a Hispanic Prosperity Initiative on Thursday. Almost immediately, Boycott Goya, Goya Foods and Goyaway began trending on social media platforms with scorn coming seemingly from all directions, including Hollywood and Washington. We are truly blessed, at the same time, to have a leader like President Trump who is a builder, Unanue said standing at a podium beside Trump. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

ucp: Moreover, the opportunities for these actors to do their important work of communicating with the public about the implications of the UCP's policies have been curtailed, along with public debate, according to National Observer. While trying to keep up with the avalanche of new developments, we may lose sight of the big picture the cumulative effects of these changes on the political landscape. The rapid pace of its announcements and the speed at which bills are pushed through the legislature have made careful analysis of the UCP's agenda challenging for the opposition parties, civil society organizations, and journalists. Among these are the effects on democracy and citizenship. The cumulative effect of these measures is a significant shift of power to the government to rule by decree and to employ state power to repress opposition. We have witnessed a series of moves to strip resources from civil society organizations, remove or weaken rights to representation and collective bargaining, and repress opposition to government policies. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

capita concentrations: From the streets of the capital of Abu Dhabi to the tourist attractions of skyscraper-studded Dubai, the cameras keep track of the license plates and faces of those passing by them, according to CTV. While heralded as a safety measure in a country so far spared from a major militant attack, it also offers its authoritarian government means to track any sign of dissent. Experts believe the UAE has one of the highest per capita concentrations of surveillance cameras in the world. There is no protection of civil liberties because there are no civil liberties, said Jodi Vittori, a nonresident scholar at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace who studies the UAE. Dubai and Emirati government officials did not respond to repeated requests for comment in the days prior to publication. It said access to that material required proper legal processes, without elaborating on what rules or laws governed their use. After publication, the Emirati government acknowledged in a statement that UAE law enforcement has access to sophisticated technology and systems. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

executive chair: DeMarco has served as the longtime executive chair for the Environmental and Land Tribunal and as associate chair for the Conservation Review Board and Environmental Review Tribunal an independent and impartial body that makes decisions on environmental permits and assessments, and was recently recognized by the United Nations Environment Programme for its best practices, according to National Observer. It's a fantastic choice, said Tim Gray, executive director of Environmental Defence, who has known DeMarco for some 25 years. Environmentalists are applauding the appointment, noting that DeMarco brings a wealth of knowledge and experience that could serve him well, depending on how the environment office in the auditor general's office is allowed to function. I'm really happy he's filling that role. It shows that they are filling the position vacated by Dianne Saxe former environmental commissioner seriously, Gray added. I think everyone is interested in seeing the degree of independence and effectiveness the office will have now ... but having DeMarco there would bode well for the office. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

industry watchers: For the similarly flawed media industry, a long-standing problem has suddenly become harder to ignore Many outlets striving to inform the public of widespread racial bias do so with stories that are assigned, reported and analyzed by predominantly white editorial staff, according to CTV. The not-so-surprising result They're failing, say industry watchers and a growing number of staff members risking their jobs to speak out. All while reporters increasingly turn their attention to detailing institutional discrimination in nearly all other facets of society, including justice, politics, health care and education. And while many media organizations are expressing renewed commitments to diversify their newsrooms and coverage, those journalists say it will take more than pledges to create meaningful change. Corus Entertainment faced a public lashing by rank-and-file staff over claims of toxic workplaces for people of colour; the National Post endured a newsroom revolt over contentious columns that denied the existence of systemic racism in Canada; CBC suspended and disciplined star Wendy Mesley for twice quoting a racial slur in editorial meetings and CBC Radio's Yukon Morning host Christine Genier resigned over the lack of Indigenous representation in Canadian media. A SERIES OF MISSTEPS Revelations have emerged in recent weeks of racial indignities suffered at multiple news outlets, where current and former employees are attempting to lift the curtain on how and why tensions persist. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

parent: Now, the government announced Thursday, the government will allow non-biological Canadian parents who are a child's legal parent at birth to pass down their citizenship, according to CTV. Laurence Caron, who is Canadian, and her partner Elsje van der Ven, who is Dutch, are responsible for the change after a long legal battle. Previously, children born to Canadians abroad automatically received citizenship only if there was a genetic link between the parent and the child or the parent gave birth to the child. When van der Van gave birth to their son four years ago while they were living in the Netherlands, the couple went to apply for his Canadian citizenship and found out he didn't get it automatically. We were shocked, disappointed and very hurt, Caron said during a virtual news conference Thursday. The reason Caron's biological material was not used for his conception. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

population growth: According to Sondhi, Canada's population is seeing its slowest growth since 2015, and immigration has collapsed due to the COVID-19 pandemic, according to Georgia Asian. That's bad news for the country's housing market. Fewer People Less Demand Easing Population Growth to Weigh on Housing goes the heading of the study prepared by economist Rishi Sondhi. Canada's population has expanded greatly on account of immigration, and with fewer newcomers arriving, both homeownership and rental markets are going to take a hit. Sondhi noted that most immigrants tend to settle in Toronto, Vancouver, Montreal, and Calgary. Lesser inflows of immigrants and non-permanent residents will impact rental and ownership housing markets alike, Sondhi wrote in the document released Wednesday July 8 . According to Sondhi, the slowdown in immigration will have lasting impacts on the market for ownership housing . The effects are expected to be felt through 2021. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

press: See the Latest Print EditionGEORGIA STRAIGHTHistory About UsSite Map CoversLEGALPrivacy Policy Terms & Conditions 2020 Vancouver Free Press, according to Georgia Asian. Best of Vancouver, BOV and Golden Plates are trade-marks of Vancouver Free Press Publishing Corp. Thank you for your patience as we work towards bringing this back. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

singer front: Popular columnists who are featured on major platforms with significant media exposure that writers of colour can only dream of have also waded into the debate, according to National Observer. They call the decision by the Montreal Jazz Festival to cancel the show intellectual terrorism, an attack on freedom of speech, emotional tyranny, cultural Apartheid, a blow to artistic freedom, fascism and censorship. The show was recently cancelled after major protests and international media reported on the fact that it was produced by a white producer and featured a predominantly white cast with a white singer front and centre.I've heard Quebec pundits characterize the protests and the outrage as hysteria and paranoia. Are you listening to yourselves speak What embarrassing hyperbole!As stand-up comedian Louis T recently tweeted, when Mathieu Bock C t and Richard Martineau were against the re-enactment of the Battle at the Plains of Abraham by the federal government in 2009, the event was cancelled. What people are reading Cronyism, patronage and destruction of democratic rights mark Kenney's rule by decree They wanted to buy a forest to save it from loggers. Was that censorship too or simply a just cause prevailing When the CBC had to pull The Story of Us and publicly apologize following an uproar in Quebec about the way the historical TV series portrayed French settlers was that censorship or a wrong righted Perspective is a funny thing. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

immigration system: Problems in sharing information with immigration officials also slowed things down, according to CTV. The border agency is responsible for carrying out removal orders to ensure public safety and the integrity of the immigration system. In a report tabled in Parliament Wednesday, the auditor said the Canada Border Services Agency's efforts were hampered by poor data quality and case-management flaws, resulting in avoidable delays in thousands of cases. The report noted the federal government had made significant investments over the last decade to improve the efficiency of the asylum system, including removals. The agency also lost track of 34,700 people and was not conducting the regular follow-ups to locate them by opening each file at least every three years, or once a year for people with criminal histories. However, the auditor general found, the border agency had not touched thousands of files for years, including some high-priority removals. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

laura tribe: In the absence of meaningful policy or regulation governing facial recognition, it cannot be considered safe for use in Canada, they tell the minister, according to National Observer. The letter, made public Wednesday, is signed by Tim McSorley, national co-ordinator of the Ottawa-based International Civil Liberties Monitoring Group, and Laura Tribe, executive director of Open Media, who are spearheading the campaign. In an open letter to Public Safety Minister Bill Blair, they call the technology highly problematic, given its lack of accuracy and invasive nature, and say it poses a threat to Canadians' fundamental rights. It is endorsed by 29 other prominent groups including Amnesty International Canada, the Canadian Federation of Students, the Canadian Muslim Lawyers Association and Privacy International, as well as 46 academics, researchers, lawyers and other civil-society members. The government responded Wednesday by saying it is reviewing legislation, policies and programs related to all emerging technologies, including facial recognition. What people are reading Doug Ford ready to cut environmental assessments again for 'economic recovery'First Black candidate ever to run for the Conservative party leadership in Canada witnessed chat box filling with racial slurs as she debated opponentsWE details thousands in fees for Trudeaus The letter also calls on the government to initiate a meaningful public consultation on all aspects of facial-recognition technology in Canada and to establish clear, transparent policies and laws regulating its use, including reforms to federal privacy law. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

mood disorder: A new study, published Wednesday in the journal JAMA Psychiatry, finds adolescents who live in areas with high levels of outdoor artificial light at night get less sleep and are more likely to have a mood disorder than teens who live with low levels of outdoor light, according to CTV. Research has long studied the association between indoor artificial light and mental health, but few studies have looked at the impact of outdoor artificial light, especially in teens, making this the first study of its kind, the authors said, with potentially long-term implications for mental and physical health. Now, you may want to use light-blocking curtains at your bedroom windows as well -- especially for any children in your home. Although environmental light exposure is only one factor in a more complex network of influences on sleep and behavior, it is likely to be an important target for prevention and interventions in adolescent health, said co-author Kathleen Merikangas, a senior investigator and chief of the Genetic Epidemiology Research Branch at the National Institute of Mental Health, in a statement. Science has linked poor slumber with high blood pressure, a weakened immune system, weight gain, a lack of libido and a higher risk of diabetes, stroke, cardiovascular disease, dementia and some cancers. POOR SLEEP IN TEENS When our internal 24-hour body clock, called our circadian rhythm, is disrupted by a change in sleep patterns or a sleep disorder, it impacts both our physical and mental health. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

trump: In the more prominent of the two cases, involving U.S. President Barack Obama's health care overhaul, the justices greenlighted changes the Trump administration had sought, according to CTV. The administration announced in 2017 that it would allow more employers to opt out of providing the no-cost birth control coverage required under the law, but lower courts had blocked the changes. In both cases the court ruled 7-2, with two liberal justices joining conservatives in favour of the Trump administration and religious employers. The ruling is a significant election-year win for President Donald Trump, who counts on heavy support from evangelicals and other Christian groups for votes and policy backing. In one of those earlier cases, the court rejected Trump's effort to end legal protections for 650,000 young immigrants. It was also good news for the administration, which in recent weeks has seen headline-making Supreme Court decisions go against its positions. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

driftwood beer: It's an annual Latin-American plaza featuring music, food, and plenty of booths offering everything from trips down south to works of art, according to Georgia Asian. And it wouldn't be Carnaval del Sol without a soccer tournament, which has become a festival trademark. That's because Latincouver is hosting Carnaval del Sol for the second and final day in Vancouver. There are plazas devoted to food, travel, Driftwood beer, and music from Latin America, which is home to more than 600 million people. The food plaza is attracting plenty of diners. In Vancouver, there has been a significant increase in the number of Brazilians and Mexicans, in particular, who've made Metro Vancouver their home. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

employee safety: Warner says not all the services that are usually offered to the public will be available in-person and they'll continue to ask people to do things online where possible, according to CTV. All of the 318 of Service Canada Centres were closed on March 26 by Minister of Social Development Ahmed Hussen, citing safety issues for staff members and the need to follow public health advice due to COVID-19. Crystal Warner, national executive vice-president of the Canada Employment and Immigration Union, confirmed to CTV News the re-opening would start this week, with a goal of having five offices per province. Prior to the shutdown, Warner says the situation at Service Canada Centres was so bad that employee safety was at risk, leading to employees refusing to work. Incidents of employees being spat on, having items thrown at them, and having employees call the police to break up fist fights, had happened in March according to Warner. Warner noted that as unemployment levels rose at the start of the pandemic, people coming into the office for services were increasingly agitated and hostile towards Service Canada employees. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

government data: The period of analysis was short, consisting of just 19 days from June 10 to 29, according to Georgia Asian. But, speaking at a news conference in Victoria this morning July 7 B.C. Finance Minister Mike de Jong described the information that the province collected from property-transfer tax forms as the most reliable data that's been collected on the issue so far. That's according to new government data released today July 7 that adds to what little is known about who is purchasing Vancouver properties and driving prices to record highs. For the City of Vancouver, foreign nationals accounted for 4.1 percent of property sales. For Surrey, it was 3.3 percent. For Richmond, that number was 14.3 percent and for Burnaby it was 10.9 percent. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

restrictions: But as most of the country emerges from pandemic restrictions, the virus has resumed spreading at an alarming rate in Victoria's capital, Melbourne, according to CTV. The city is buckling down with more extreme and divisive measures that have ignited anger and arguments over who is to blame. The southeastern state of Victoria had some of the nation's toughest pandemic measures and was among the most reluctant to lift its restrictions when the worst of its outbreak seemed to have passed. Newsletter sign-up Get The COVID-19 Brief sent to your inbox Victoria Premier Daniel Andrews said Tuesday that the entire city and some of its surrounds will be locked down again from Wednesday night under tougher restrictions than were imposed during the first shutdown that started in March. About 3,000 residents of nine public housing high-rise buildings were given just an hour's notice at the weekend before being prohibited from leaving their apartments for at least five days. We are in many respects in a more precarious, challenging and potentially tragic position now than we were some months ago, Andrews said. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

stool samples: She refused to give stool samples to authorities and continued to spread the bacteria via her unsanitary ways until she was caught and quarantined twice for a total of 26 years, dying alone without friends, according to CTV. While no one wants to think of themselves as a super spreader of COVID-19, a new study has given support to the idea that silent transmission -- the spread of virus by someone with no obvious symptoms -- could be responsible for half of all novel coronavirus cases in the United States. As the first known healthy carrier of the bacterial disease, which is transmitted by a toxin in feces, Malone refused to believe she was an asymptomatic conduit for typhoid fever. Transmission via people with no symptoms, or during the few days before symptoms are apparent, is a primary driver of COVID-19 spread, the study, published Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, found. According to Tuesday morning's Johns Hopkins University data, 31 states are reporting higher rates of new COVID-19 cases this week compared to last week. Newsletter sign-up Get The COVID-19 Brief sent to your inbox More than one-third of silent infections would need to be identified and isolated to suppress a future outbreak, the study estimated. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

border restrictions: And because their countries' border restrictions prevent either of them from travelling to the other's home, they're planning to meet up on another continent, in a nation where they don't speak the language or have any ties and the novel coronavirus is a much more pressing concern, according to CTV. It seems crazy in my mind, for him to be leaving an island in the Caribbean where there's no COVID. I'm leaving our other island in Eastern Canada where there's also no COVID, and here we go off, leaving our safe havens and off we go to Europe for I don't know how long, Carly Fleet told CTVNews.ca vin a phone call on Monday from Grand Manan, N.B. Newsletter sign-up Get The COVID-19 Brief sent to your inbox None of New Brunswick's 165 COVID-19 cases have been traced to Grand Manan, an island in the Bay of Fundy. He lives on an island where every case has been resolved. Grenada's 23 patients have all recovered. They were last together in late February, weeks before the pandemic disrupted global travel and Grenada shut its borders. But travel restrictions in both countries mean neither Fleet nor her common-law partner Sean Bodden can visit the other. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

jermaine carby: Weeks after the incident, Ontario's Special Investigation Unit announced it will start a process to collect race-based data in effort to identify and monitor systemic racial disparities and ensure the fair treatment of everyone, according to a report from The Canadian Press, according to Rabble. This historic step forward also comes at the expense of many Black and Indigenous people who died at the hands of police such as Andrew Loku, D'Andre Campbell, Jason Collins, Eisha Hudson, Machuar Madut, Olando Brown, Jermaine Carby, and countless others. The Black community and allies are demanding answers for what happened to Korchiniski-Paquet, and the many other Black people who ended up dead after police were called. The collection of race-based disaggregated data is not a question of convenience, it is a question of human rights. you can't know the degree to which you are helping your citizens realize their full human rights, or that you're adequately protecting their human rights, if you're not collecting and openly reporting this data, said Anthony Morgan, a racial justice lawyer who leads a team at the City of Toronto to address anti-Black racism. In 2017, The United Nations' Working Group of Experts on People of African Descent released a report on its findings of the state of Black communities across Canada and made recommendations. Critics have long advocated for the collection of race-based data by law enforcement agencies. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

mortgage payments: Prior to the pandemic, Arabs and West Asians had the highest poverty rates while West Asians and Filipinos had the highest rates of job loss, according to 2016 census data, according to CTV. Southeast Asian and Korean groups both reported that 40 per cent have experienced a work disruption during COVID-19, followed by Black participants 38 per cent South Asian 37 per cent Latin American 34 per cent Arab 33 per cent and Chinese 31 per cent . Newsletter sign-up Get The COVID-19 Brief sent to your inbox The survey also asked participants about the impact of COVID-19 on their ability to meet financial obligations such as rent or mortgage payments, utilities and groceries. The survey released Monday found that 42 per cent of Filipino-Canadians and 47 per cent of West Asian-Canadians have experienced temporary or permanent job loss or reduced work hours amid the pandemic, compared to 34 per cent of white participants. Most visible minority groups surveyed reported a strong or moderate negative financial impact from COVID-19. The data was collected from more than 36,000 Canadians through an online crowdsourcing questionnaire between May 26 and June 8. The highest negative financial impacts were reported among Arabs, West Asians and Filipinos. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

refugees: Only 10 percent of government-assisted refugees ended up living in Vancouver from 2010 to 2013, compared to 28 percent in Surrey, 22 percent in Coquitlam, and 16 percent in Burnaby 21.8 percent including New Westminster numbers . Vancouver is the number one destination for refugee claimants, but this data likely reflects the fact that many refugee claimants live in temporary accommodation in shelter or with relatives until they receive a decision on their claim, the report states, according to Georgia Asian. Iran supplies the most government-assisted refugees The top five source countries of government-assisted refugees to B.C. over that period were Iran 24 percent Iraq 18 percent Somalia 12 percent Afghanistan 10 percent and Bhutan eight percent . This is just one of many intriguing facts in a new 40-page report by the Immigrant Services Society of B.C. called Refugee Newcomers in Vancouver Changing Faces and Neighbourhoods 2000-2013. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.

research group: Yet those who know him well say the common Kenney caricature a rumpled, social conservative, partisan spear carrying culture warrior with a permanent five o'clock shadow almost entirely misses the mark, according to National Observer. He's one of the warmest, funniest, most engaging people ... whereas on television he probably comes across as more associated with the Harper years and a certain style of politics, says Mark Cameron, a former policy director in Harper's Prime Minister's Office who now heads an environmental research group. Kenney, the 48 year old star lieutenant to former prime minister Stephen Harper, was one of the highest profile and most media accessible ministers during a decade of Conservative rule that wasn't characterized by either trait. Political reporters know Kenney as the guy who always had a point of view and was willing to share it and vigorously defend it a rare trait in any government and pure gold during the buttoned down Conservative reign. Kenney announced Wednesday he is taking that direct engagement back home to Alberta, where he plans to seek the leadership of the provincial Progressive Conservatives while openly gunning for a merger with their bitter right of centre rivals, the Wildrose Party. What people are reading The future of the Conservative Party and how Trump's America strong-armed Canada Global LNG terminal survey casts doubt on industry as safe bet'Trudeau takes a pass on meeting this week with Trump That's definitely his hallmark, that he's open, he's engaged and he likes to state his opinion and argue it openly, as opposed to always couching behind message lines, says Cameron. (www.immigrantscanada.com). As reported in the news.