In the future, Express Entry rounds may invite candidates based on the job, language, or qualifications.

The Canadian government is considering modifying the Express Entry process to enable its immigration minister to welcome applicants based on economic criteria.

In an email to CIC News, Aiden Strickland, a spokesperson for the immigration minister, stated that the proposed reforms will strengthen Canada's capacity to choose candidates who match its economic needs.

"This will permit IRCC to direct designated draw pointed toward picking people in the line who have specific language abilities or medical care capabilities, to specify a couple of models," Strickland composed. "This is basic in managing Canada's work problems.

The reforms are now being debated in Canada's legislature. On May 19, Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada's Somogyvari presented the proposed modifications before the Standing Committee on Immigration and Citizenship, a panel of elected officials that investigates immigration issues in Canada.

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The revisions, according to Somogyvari, an IRCC Director-General, would allow the immigration minister to invite Express Entry candidates on a new basis, one that would promote the minister's economic goals.

The modifications are currently being debated in Canada's legislature. The proposed modifications were brought before the Standing Committee on Immigration and Citizenship on May 19 by Philip Somogyvari of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC), a committee of elected officials that investigates immigration issues in Canada.

The revisions, according to Somogyvari, an IRCC Director-General, will allow the immigration minister to invite Express Entry candidates on a new basis, one that will serve the minister's economic goals.

The IRCC website would continue to post the draw information, including the unique eligibility conditions. The minister would also have to identify the economic goal they are attempting to achieve, as well as report on the use of these draws annually to Parliament. Somogyvari said the government currently has no occupations identified when NDP immigration critic Jenny Kwan asked which occupations would be indicated in these draws.

Currently, the Canadian immigration minister lacks the authority to invite individuals from the Canada Express Entry pool who have certain work experience, educational credentials, or are French speakers destined for a linguistic minority group. That might change if the proposed revisions to Bill C-19's division 23 succeed.

"The changes would permit the pastor, for instance, to zero in on generally French-talking people in the Express Entry pool," Somogyvari added. "Right now, while French-talking competitors get the additional points that work on their positioning score, it is conceivable that not all French-speaking applicants in the pool will be welcomed." With the suggested authority in place, the department could conduct an invitation round that would practically invite all of the recognised French-speaking individuals in the Express Entry pool if the minister wanted to do so."

The method for deciding which groups will be chosen is continuously being refined. Somogyvari stated that such choices would most likely be made after consultation with employer organisations, stakeholders, the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act's objectives, Employment and Social Development Canada, and provincial and territorial governments.

In regards to express entry in 2022

The Federal Skilled Worker Program (FSWP), the Canadian Experience Class (CEC), and the Federal Skilled Trades Program all use the Canada Express Entry application management system (FSTP).

To apply for one of these programs, overseas employees must first register with the Express Entry system and express their interest in immigrating to Canada. Candidates for one of the three programs are given a score based on their work experience, education, language abilities, age, and other considerations. The highest-scoring individuals are invited to apply for Canadian permanent residence by IRCC.

IRCC has recently limited invitation rounds to candidates who have been nominated by a Provincial Nominee Program (PNP). IRCC suspended invitation rounds for the FSWP in December 2020, and then paused CEC draws in September 2021, after building a backlog of Canada Express Entry applications during the epidemic. Canadian Immigration Minister Sean Fraser recently announced that draws for these candidates would resume in July, and that new applicant processing times will be reduced to six months.

Somogyvari stated that the changes will have no effect on current or future processing delays.

The current conversation

Kwan demanded that the government publish a list of the groups affected by the new legislation.

"I'm worried that there would be no parliamentary examination of what these groups will be," Kwan told the council. "There is no technique set up to decide if these groups will be fair, or how powerful [the government] will be in picking individuals who will add to Canada's monetary prosperity."

"Without an unmistakable determination methodology in which areas can submit official remarks on which occupations are in requirement and an objective board to pass judgment on the requests of these employments," Kwan expressed, "the cycle could become feed for campaigning enterprises." "That is not the very thing that we're searching for." I accept we really want clear rules and a straightforward technique."

Salma Zahid of the Liberal Party, who chairs the standing committee, agreed to request revisions to the proposed alterations by May 27. The proposal will be forwarded to the ministry of finance, as it was the department that asked the Canada immigration committee to study the improvements to Express Entry.

The Standing Committee on Finance will receive the letter and decide whether the idea in the letter should be translated into changes to be submitted during the bill's clause-by-clause discussion, which is set to begin on Monday, May 30 at 11 a.m.