josephv
Mechanical
- Oct 1, 2002
- 683
Hi moltenmetal,
We agree in some good points (I too question the need for a subsidy), but you keeping saying that the subsidy only applies to "foreign-trained professionals".
That is not the whole picture, since a Canadian company cannot hire just any "foreign-trained professionals" to qualify for the subsidy.
The programme is meant to assist immigrants who have lived in Canada at least 5 years (in other words it is someone who probably already has Canadian citizenship). Furthermore, this is a group of people who often are not working in their professions or not even working at all and could use some help (i.e. they have much higher unemployment rates than other groups).
It is not true to say that recent grads do not have programmes that help them. For example, companies that hire highly skilled personnel (e.g. an Engineering Masters student) can qualify for $50,000 in grants from the Yves Landry foundation.
I know a recent grad that was offered a salary of $90,000 and the company told them that the Ives Landry grant was covering $50,000 of their salary. Is anyone complaining that the Yves Landry grants discriminate against non-Masters students?
Hope all is great with you,
Joe
We agree in some good points (I too question the need for a subsidy), but you keeping saying that the subsidy only applies to "foreign-trained professionals".
That is not the whole picture, since a Canadian company cannot hire just any "foreign-trained professionals" to qualify for the subsidy.
The programme is meant to assist immigrants who have lived in Canada at least 5 years (in other words it is someone who probably already has Canadian citizenship). Furthermore, this is a group of people who often are not working in their professions or not even working at all and could use some help (i.e. they have much higher unemployment rates than other groups).
It is not true to say that recent grads do not have programmes that help them. For example, companies that hire highly skilled personnel (e.g. an Engineering Masters student) can qualify for $50,000 in grants from the Yves Landry foundation.
I know a recent grad that was offered a salary of $90,000 and the company told them that the Ives Landry grant was covering $50,000 of their salary. Is anyone complaining that the Yves Landry grants discriminate against non-Masters students?
Hope all is great with you,
Joe