COVID-19 highlights need for better treatment of migrant labour, advocates say
OTTAWA — Migrant-rights advocates say the COVID-19 pandemic has shown that labourers in Canada can no longer be treated like “throwaway people” as they have been in the past.
Asylum-seekers working in long-term care homes in Quebec, temporary foreign workers on farms and new immigrants toiling in meat-packing plants are all working in jobs now considered essential.
But Shelley Gilbert, who works on human-trafficking cases in Windsor, Ont., says for too long people in those industries have been considered throwaways.
She and others said today that the existing immigration and workers’-rights regimes don’t provide enough protections, including pathways to permanent residency.