Permanent Closure of Nova Scotia Demand: Express Entry Stream Announced By NSNP

The permanent closure of the Nova Scotia Demand: Express Entry stream has been announced by Nova Scotia immigration.

Category A of the stream, for candidates with a job offer, will permanently close as of January 4, 2021. Category B, aimed at candidates with skills and experience in in-demand jobs, has already been closed. It had not been opened for an application window since 2018.

A message on the Nova Scotia Nominee Program (NSNP) website said the province had enjoyed more success by targeting candidates through the Nova Scotia Labour Market Priorities stream.

“The Nova Scotia Labour Market Priorities stream is more targeted and efficient in selection and processing,” the NSNP message said. “Only eligible candidates will receive invitations to apply based on draw criteria.”


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Nova Scotia Labour Market Priorities

The Labour Market Priorities stream is designed to allow the province to single out specific occupations for immigration.

The stream targets occupations for Letters of Interest.

Draws have been conducted aimed at:

  • Registered nurses or registered psychiatric nurses (NOC 3012).
  • Advertising, marketing and public relations (NOC 1123).
  • Carpenters (NOC 7271).
  • Financial auditors and accountants (NOC 1111).
  • Early childhood educators and assistants (NOC 4214).
  • Social and community service workers (NOC 4212).
  • Motor vehicle body repairers and automotive service technicians, truck and bus mechanics and mechanical repairers (NOCs 7322 or 7321).
  • Programmers and interactive media developers (NOC 2174).

Draws have also been conducted aimed at French-speaking candidates and those with a job offer. 


Nova Scotia Labour Market Priorities: Requirements

Candidates must:

  • Receive a Letter of Interest from the Nova Scotia Nominee Program within the Express Entry system.
  • Meet the minimum work experience requirements of the Express Entry stream for which you have qualified.
  • Demonstrate sufficient funds to successfully establish yourself and your family in Nova Scotia and to pay your immigration costs and travel expenses.
  • Have legal status in your current country of residence.
  • Meet eligibility criteria in place at the time you are issued a Letter of Interest.

Reports Says Canada One Of World’s Friendliest Places For Immigrants

An international think-tank’s latest report reveals Canada is moving up in the rankings of the friendliest countries for immigrants.

“Among English-speaking countries, Canada is becoming a more attractive and inclusive global destination,” says Thomas Huddleston, director of research for Migration Policy Group. 

“Canada, along with New Zealand, is taking the place of previous top-ranking countries such as Australia, the UK and the United States, which all go down in the Migration Integration Policy Index (MIPEX) rankings this round under pressure from populist political forces,” he says.


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The MIPEX’s international scorecard ranks the policy performance of 52 countries from five continents. This year, Canada received a high score of 80, placing it fourth in the world for its comprehensive, immigrant-friendly policies that emphasize equal rights, opportunities and security for newcomers.

“The MIPEX scores allow us to gauge how well our policies support or hinder newcomers on their path to settling into Canadian society,” says Anna Triandafyllidou, the Canada Excellence Research Chair in Migration and Integration at Ryerson University. 

“The index helps us compare our performance over time and identify where we have room for improvement or the potential to learn from other countries,” she says.

When the last MIPEX was released in 2015 after almost a decade of Conservative Party of Canada governments under the leadership of Prime Minister Stephen Harper, Canada ranked only sixth. 

During the Liberal Party of Canada’s years at the helm under Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Canada has since upped its overall score by two points due to improvements in access to healthcare for asylum seekers and improvements to the 2017 Citizenship Act.

Anti-Discrimination Policies

According to the international think-tank, Canada’s greatest strength is in its anti-discrimination policies. It received a top score because of its world-leading laws and policies, including the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms and its national policies on multiculturalism.

The organization recognized with its latest scorecard that permanent residents have the opportunity to obtain citizenship, and hence voting rights, relatively quickly in Canada.

But the Migration Policy Group docked Canada points because non-citizens have no opportunity for political participation at the local and national level and there is a lack of representation of non-citizens in policy-setting bodies.

Labour market mobility needs the greatest amount of improvement, the authors of the latest report state.  Migrants without legal documents or with restricted temporary work permits in Canada still face barriers to employment and limited access to healthcare.

This latest MIPEX Index report, produced by the Migration Policy Group and the Barcelona Centre for International Affairs, covers the five years ending in 2019 and measures policies to integrate migrants across five continents: Europe; Asia; North and South America, and; Oceania.

The index is a comprehensive international benchmark for integration policies and is widely used by policymakers, civil society, researchers and the media.  The policies that governments put in place affect how easily newcomers can find jobs, access language and education opportunities, develop a sense of belonging, and grow to become citizens who participate fully in society. 

Canada the Most Sought-After Destination

The results of this latest index dovetail with other recent data from surveys undertaken by Remitly, a company that lets users transfer money online from desktops, tablets or mobile phones, and the international polling giant Gallup.

In its Where the World Wants to Work report released earlier this year, Remitly revealed that Canada was the most sought-after destination in Google searches using the term “how to move abroad” of all the 101 countries surveyed.

Many of those Googling information about immigrating to Canada are Africans, particularly those living on the southern half of the continent. Canada was the preferred destination of Africans in Namibia, Botswana, Zimbabwe, Zambia, South Africa, Malawi, Tanzania, Madagascar, the Seychelles, and Mauritius and Kenya, as well as the west coast African countries of Ghana and Nigeria and Tunisia in the north. 

India and Pakistan, two major sources of immigrants to Canada, were also revealed to be Googling how to immigrate to Canada as were people living in Qatar.

Canadians Most Welcoming People

Among the European nations, those with the strongest historical, linguistic and cultural ties to Canada, perhaps unsurprisingly, also have residents thinking of hopping across the pond to Canada. Google searches of how to immigrate to Canada were most common in Ireland, the United Kingdom, Belgium and France.

A Gallup survey of Canadian attitudes to immigrants also shows them to be the most welcoming people in the world when it comes to newcomers.

Gallup’s latest Migrant Acceptance Index asked people living in 145 countries last year whether they thought immigrants living in their country, becoming their neighbors and marrying into their families were good or bad things.

Canada scored the highest score, 8.46, indicating Canadians are the most welcoming people in the world when it comes to immigration. 

Canada Relaxes Work Experience Requirement For Rural & Northern Immigration Pilot

A relaxation of the Rural & Northern Immigration Pilot (RNIP) work experience requirements and a new temporary work permit measure have been announced by Canada’s federal immigration authority.

The work experience change means the one year (or 1,560 hours) of experience required in the previous three years no longer has to be continuous.

Candidates can now qualify for permanent residence through the community-driven program even if there were breaks in their employment.

The change is applicable to all applications received under the pilot, which gradually opened in 11 Canadian communities throughout 2020.


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The new requirement ensures candidates are not penalized for breaks in employment, including temporary work interruptions or layoffs caused by the pandemic, says Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC).

Meanwhile, a new temporary measure announced by IRCC means candidates waiting for a decision on their permanent residence applications through the RNIP can apply for a work permit without being penalized due to pandemic-related processing delays.

The first permanent residents accepted under the RNIP – two licensed practical nurses in Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario – were announced on Monday December 14, 2020. 

“Newcomers have played an outsized role in our hospitals and long-term care homes during the pandemic,” said Immigration Minister Marco Mendicino.

He added: “The RNIP and other pilots are helping to get the workers we need to places like Sault Ste. Marie. We’re going to continue working to ensure that the benefits of immigration are felt in cities and towns across our country.”


What is the Rural & Northern Immigration Pilot?

The Rural and Northern Immigration Pilot is designed to help bring new skilled worker immigrants to smaller communities.

The five-year federal immigration pilot is designed to help smaller communities with aging populations and labour shortages, which struggle to attract and retain new immigrants.

It is a community-driven program that aims to spread out the benefit of immigration.

To be included in the pilot, communities must:

  • Have a population of 50,000 or less and be located at least 75km from the core of a Census Metropolitan Area, OR
  • Have a population of up to 200,000 people and be considered remote from other larger cities, according to the Statistics Canada Remoteness Index.

RNIP: Steps to Permanent Residence

  1. Candidates must check they meet both the federal government eligibility requirements and community-specific requirements (see below).
  2. Find an eligible job with an employer in one of the participating communities (listed below).
  3. Candidates with a job offer can submit an application for recommendation to the community.
  4. Candidates with a community recommendation can apply for permanent residence.

RNIP: Participating Communities

Community Community website
North Bay, ON www.northbayrnip.ca
Sudbury, ON www.investsudbury.ca/how-can-we-help/immigration-options/
Timmins, ON Timmins RNIP
Sault Ste. Marie, ON www.welcometossm.com
Thunder Bay, ON www.gothunderbay.com
Brandon, MB www.economicdevelopmentbrandon.com
Altona/Rhineland, MB www.seedrgpa.com
Moose Jaw, SK www.moosejawrnip.ca
Claresholm, AB www.claresholm.ca/rural-northern-immigration-pilot
Vernon, BC www.rnip-vernon.ca
West Kootenay (Trail, Castlegar, Rossland, Nelson), BC www.wk-rnip.ca

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