WelcomeHomeTO is a group of professionals from various disciplines with the shared goal of supporting the best settlement experience for new Canadians.
Up now - closing remarks from our friend, @DolyBegum , an incredible champion for #LanguageAccess for all Canadians. It's an honor to keep working with younudge the changes required to provide equitable, timely access to quality information + services for all! #LAD22
While we are highlighting @ranooshy and @WelcomeHomeTO who helped to put together a great number of discussions exploring the ground-level settlement experience of #newcomers and their support networks (sponsors, volunteers, front-line service providers)...
Today I announced new measures that will help reduce wait times, improve client experience, and help modernize our immigration system.
These measures build on the work we've already done to reduce wait times, including hiring 500 new processing staff and digitizing applications.
"KITCHENER— After helping hundreds of Syrian refugees settle here, Christian Snyder knows there is a real need for an easy-to-use platform that helps newcomers into their Canadian life." https://t.co/Xv3qHXe6JG Agreed! @ranooshy@bayankhatib
"We also need to put in some serious effort to improve the user experience of Canada's immigration system." - @SeanFraserMP Agree! What are the steps being taken to realize that? @cdnpoli#immigrationmatters
Better inter-governmental co-ordination would improve refugee response systems, particularly in countries where Canada is diplomatically present. https://t.co/ghFtl9WXqy #cdnpoli#immgrantsmatter@WelcomeHomeTO@ranooshy
New job opportunity! @youthfulcities is looking for 5 part-time Outreach Assistants to help develop a new data and technology tool that will support refugee settlement in secondary cities. To learn more visit https://t.co/Du8pUuXxL6 #cdnpoli@CivicTechTO@SeanFraserMP
"Agencies say finding rentals has been a major problem as many communities struggle with an affordable housing crisis." https://t.co/SPwe7FK2Wv Less of a problem when refugees move to towns with more housing/less overwhelmed service providers... #cdnpoli@bayankhatib
Immigrants made up 21.9% of Canada’s population in 2016 (Census 2016), + 23.8% of the labour force (Census 2016)
International students contributed about $21.5 billion to the Canadian economy in 2018 (Global Affairs Canada, 2018)
https://t.co/YubmsqW3EN #cdnpoli@WelcomeHomeTO