CBCnews
Story Tools: EMAIL | PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK | Bookmark and Share

Change will mean fewer P.E.I. immigrants: minister

Last Updated: Wednesday, November 26, 2008 | 1:30 PM AT

Federal changes to the Provincial Nominee Program mean P.E.I. will not be able to attract nearly as many immigrants, says the provincial minister responsible for the program.

'If it's not working, I'm definitely going back to the federal program.'— Innovation Minister Richard Brown

After Sept. 2, the Immigrant Partner Program section of the PNP underwent a major revision. Since it started in 2001, potential immigrants could get a visa, pending health and security checks, for $200,000, which was slated for investment in a local company.

Citizenship and Immigration Canada has now raised the bar for potential immigrants to $1 million or a one-third stake in the local company.

Through the summer leading up to the change, 1,800 potential immigrants applied to come to P.E.I., a number Innovation Minister Richard Brown expects to drop sharply.

"We did 1,800, we may be back may be to 20 or 30 a year," said Brown.

Controversy over last-minute rush

The rush of applicants leading up to the change came with some controversy. Citizenship and Immigration questioned the quality of companies being approved for investment, and others wondered about the involvement of government MLAs in the program.

That controversy did not become public until a few weeks after the program changes. In an e-mail to CBC News, Citizenship and Immigration said it made the changes because investors weren't required to be actively involved in the P.E.I. companies, so there was no incentive for immigrants to remain in the province.

Brown said he argued with Ottawa about its regulation changes, and the government feels the old partner program did give immigrants an active role in local companies.

"The federal government says, 'You'll do just as good under the new program.' We're going to try it," said Brown.

"If it's not working, I'm definitely going back to the federal program to say you've set the bar too high. I'm non-competitive now and we're not getting immigrants to P.E.I."

Brown will appear before the province's public accounts committee Wednesday to answer questions about how the program was run until September.

  •  
Story Tools: EMAIL | PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK | Bookmark and Share
 

Prince Edward Island Headlines

P.E.I. pesticide ban to differ from Nova Scotia's
P.E.I.'s pesticide ban — which comes into effect April 1 — differs from legislation proposed in Nova Scotia, meaning a different set of lawn care products could be sold on either side of the Northumberland Strait.
P.E.I. benefits to be offered by direct deposit
The Prince Edward Island government will offer direct deposit as an option within the next year for people who receive social assistance and disability payments.
2 P.E.I. men held in restaurant theft
Two Prince Edward Island men have been arrested and charged following a break-in at a Summerside restaurant.
Autism Society backs parents
The Autism Society of Prince Edward Island is standing behind parents who say their autistic children were unfairly removed from school for extended periods.
P.E.I. paramedic revives N.B. woman on plane
A New Brunswick woman is praising a P.E.I. paramedic who revived her on a recent flight to the Dominican Republic.

Canada Headlines

Paralympics close on a high note
The 2010 Paralympic Games came to a close before a crowd of thousands gathered at the celebration plaza in Whistler, B.C. on Sunday night.
Chalk River physicist gone without a trace
In the Ottawa Valley town of Deep River, police are frustrated and the community remains confounded by the mysterious disappearance of a physicist working at the nearby Chalk River Nuclear Reactor.
Sovereigntists are resisters: Duceppe
Bloc Québécois Leader Gilles Duceppe is standing by his remarks likening sovereigntists to Second World War resistance movements.
B.C. avalanche kills 2 French skiers Video
A third deadly B.C. avalanche in a week killed two French skiers Saturday as they were coming down a mountain after being dropped off by helicopter.
Hansen launches spinal cord injury fundraiser Video
Twenty-five years to the day after Rick Hansen circled the world in a wheelchair, he's launching a new fundraiser for spinal cord injury research.

People who read this also read …

Top CBCNews.ca Headlines

Headlines

Historic U.S. health-care bill passes Video
The U.S. House of Representatives has passed a historic health-care reform bill that will make coverage possible for more than 30 million uninsured Americans and end discrimination by insurance companies of people with existing medical conditions.
Sovereigntists are resisters: Duceppe
Bloc Québécois Leader Gilles Duceppe is standing by his remarks likening sovereigntists to Second World War resistance movements.
Paralympics close on a high note
The 2010 Paralympic Games came to a close before a crowd of thousands gathered at the celebration plaza in Whistler, B.C. on Sunday night.
U.S. commitment to Israel 'rock solid:' Clinton
U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton is assuring Israel that the Obama administration's commitment to the security and future of the Jewish state is "rock solid" despite a severe diplomatic spat this month.
Chalk River physicist gone without a trace
In the Ottawa Valley town of Deep River, police are frustrated and the community remains confounded by the mysterious disappearance of a physicist working at the nearby Chalk River Nuclear Reactor.