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Strategic Plan to Foster Immigration to Francophone Minority Communities Presentation by: Erika Gates-Gasse, OCASI.

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Presentation on theme: "Strategic Plan to Foster Immigration to Francophone Minority Communities Presentation by: Erika Gates-Gasse, OCASI."— Presentation transcript:

1 Strategic Plan to Foster Immigration to Francophone Minority Communities Presentation by: Erika Gates-Gasse, OCASI

2 Orgwise Organizational Standards Funded by: Context March 2002: creation of the Citizenship and Immigration Canada Francophone Minority Communities Steering Committee; November 2003: the Steering Committee releases the Strategic Framework to Foster Immigration to Francophone Minority Communities, which outlined 5 objectives; March 2005: the Steering Committee publishes Towards Building a Canadian Francophonie of Tomorrow: Summary of Initiatives 2002-2006 to Foster Immigration to Francophone Minority Communities; September 2006: the Steering Committee releases the Strategic Plan to Foster Immigration to Francophone Minority Communities, which is a five year plan to better coordinate the efforts to achieve the five objectives set out in the Framework. Target: By 2008, 4.4% of newcomers outside of Quebec should be French-speaking. The Steering Committee estimated it would take 15 years to reach the annual target of 8,000 to 10,000 French speaking immigrants to Francophone Minority Communities (FMCs).

3 Between 2003 and 2011, approximately 40% of French-speaking newcomers came from the sub-Saharan African region. Outside of Quebec, Ontario has the greatest number of French-speaking people. New Brunswick has some 236,100 Francophones (33% of the its population). Ontario has 2x this number, with a population of 578,045 Francophones (~4.8% of total population). According to the 2006 Census, immigrants represent approximately 20% of the total population of Canada and 28% of the population of Ontario; 2.8% of immigrants in Ontario are French-speaking. Francophone immigration is largely an urban phenomenon in Ontario. In 2006, 92% of Francophone immigrants lived in Toronto (33.1%), in Ottawa (24.3%) or in southern Ontario. Approximately 20% live in Peel and York. Hamilton, Halton, Essex, Waterloo, Middlesex, Durham, and Niagara account for approximately 15% of Francophone immigrants. Refugees an important source of French-speaking newcomers (22% vs 11%).

4 Challenges 1.The number and make-up of French-speaking immigrants to FMCs; “French-speaking immigrant” definition changed to specify those whose first official language is French. 2. Immigrant mobility; No data available on the mobility rate of French-speaking immigrants within Canada. 3. Integration difficulties for immigrants; 4. FMCs’ lack of capacity to recruit, receive and integrate French-speaking immigrants.

5 Strategic Focus 1.Better integration of immigrants & refugees already settled in FMCs; French-speaking immigrants and refugees from Africa and Haiti 2.Recruitment of new immigrants; Economic class immigrants and international students, refugees 3.Integration, retention and settlement of new French- speaking immigrants in FMCs. Focused approach (targeted funding to specific FMCs with demonstrated capacity); Fostering the employability of workers trained abroad (focus on health & education); Ensuring a functional methodology for teaching both official languages and an effective method for delivery (67% don’t use French at work).

6 Implementation Coordination Mechanisms Local & provincial: Réseaux en immigration francophone (Ottawa, Hamilton and Sudbury) National: Francophone Minority Communities Steering Committee, Implementation Committee Priorities for 2006-2011 Implementing and supporting local networks; Increasing awareness of the local community; Implementing language training in English and/or French; Providing training to upgrade professional and employability skills; Implement 3 major pilot projects over 5 years in at least 2 fields (education and health) Research; Supporting the creation of micro-businesses; Supporting French-language post-secondary institutions in the recruitment and integration of international students; Proposal to support the initiatives of 10 post-secondary institutions. Promoting immigration and selecting potential immigrants; Supporting refugees.

7 Ontario Immigration Strategy August 2011: Final Report: Research on Settlement Services Available in French for Francophone Newcomers to Ontario Francophone immigration to Ontario is increasing. They represent 2.8% of Ontario's total immigrant population. New Francophone immigrants who arrived between 2001 and 2006 represent 3.8% of Ontario's recent immigrants (2001-2006). Since 2000, 3,500 to 4,000 Francophones have immigrated to Ontario each year. Labour-market integration and language classes identified by participants as major barriers. November 2012: Launch of Ontario’s Immigration Strategy Target: achieve 5% Francophone immigration Expert Roundtable recommends using the Provincial Nominee Program to achieve this target

8 CIC Evaluation of the Strategy July 2012: Evaluation of the Recruitment and Integration of French Speaking Immigrants to Francophone Minority Communities Initiative, 2008-2011 4.4% objective: CIC set a short and long term objective: 1.8% by 2013, 4.4% by 2023. According to their numbers, 1.8% achieved in 2004. Networks: stability of funding, national vs regional vision. Services: increase in number of services provided in French (but stats are for agencies that have served at least one French-speaking newcomer). Research: significant new research created, but still an under-researched area. Recruitment barriers: immigrant selection process can be a significant barrier. Destination Canada


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