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CCCB president Bishop Douglas Crosby, pictured here in a file photo, urges federal immigration Minister John McCallum to speed up the processing of refugees. CCN file photo

Act now to process refugees, Bishop Crosby tells minister

By 
  • October 18, 2016

OTTAWA – The president of Canada's bishop conference has written a frank letter to the federal Immigration Minister urging immediate government action to unclog delays in processing refugee applicants in order to preserve "confidence" in the refugee sponsorship program.

Writing to Immigration Minister John McCallum, Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops president Bishop Douglas Crosby said many sponsoring groups have become frustrated due to long wait times and money spent on refugee families that have yet to arrive.

“Needless to say, delayed arrivals and the lack of clear and transparent communication about the status of pending cases, poses the risk of undermining the faith of Canadians in the government’s ability to follow through on its promises,” Crosby wrote in a letter dated Oct. 6.

Crosby said Canadians responded generously in late 2015 and early 2016 when the government promised "arrival timelines of less than two months.” This led to sponsoring groups signing leases and renting properties, as they expected arrivals to be “imminent.”

Long processing delays have meant “significant financial losses for sponsoring groups” and the longer they go on, the more they “undermine the prospect that sufficient resources will be in place once the sponsorship period actually begins, post-arrival,” wrote the Hamilton, Ont. bishop. “Needless to say, there has arisen a significant level of anxiety and concern within sponsoring groups, especially those with finite sponsorship resources at their disposal.”

According to Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada’s website, Canada has accepted 32,427 Syrian refugees since last November. Of that number, private sponsors have received 12,053.

The government is currently screening and processing another 21,900 refugees in all categories, including government sponsorships. Another 3,259 refugees have been approved but have not yet travelled to Canada.

According to a spokeswoman for Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada, for the government to meet an objective to bring 25,000 Syrian refugees to Canada by the end of February 2016, "additional resources and special measures were temporarily put in place.”

“This effort was an exceptional and time-limited situation which required extraordinary measures in order to resettle 25,000 Syrian refugees in roughly 100 days,” said Lindsay Wemp in an email.

Since this "blitz" period, sponsorship applications have continued to be processed and applications submitted up to March 31 should be finalized by the end of this year or early 2017, she said.

Crosby urged immediate steps to process pending cases as “quickly as possible.” Ongoing delays, he wrote, "represent potential to undermine the government’s ability to meet future immigration levels plans, as interest and confidence in the sponsorship program will continue to dissolve and wane as poor outcomes continue to manifest.”

Crosby also asked the minister to expedite all refugee applications, not only those from Syria.

“It is neither reasonable nor fair for an Afghan family in Pakistan to wait 75 months, or for an Eritrean refugee in Egypt to wait 55 months, to have their sponsorship applications processed to completion: this is both cruel and counterintuitive to the nature of a life-saving program,” he wrote.

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