British Columbia

B.C. accepting only 1,100 new skilled immigrant applications after feds slash provincial nominee program

The odds of new applications from immigrants being accepted into British Columbia's nominee program this year have dropped to near zero for anyone other than health workers or entrepreneurs.

Business leader and immigration lawyer both say that province needs more immigrants to boost economy

An East Asian woman smiles as she is pictured in profile.
Post-Secondary Education Minister Anne Kang, seen here in 2019, said that the province would prioritize health-care workers under the provincial nominee program for accepting immigrants. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

The odds of new applications from immigrants being accepted into British Columbia's nominee program this year have dropped to near zero for anyone other than health workers or entrepreneurs.

The province said the changes are aimed at prioritizing where it spends its nominations after the federal government slashed the number of available slots, but the B.C. Chamber of Commerce said a focus on the health-care sector unfairly advantages the government's needs over those of the business community. 

A bulletin from the province says it was only allotted 4,000 nominations this year, about half of what it had last year and substantially less than the 11,000 it wanted.

It says the program, which helps immigrants already living in Canada gain permanent residency if they fill key jobs, will accept 1,100 new applications this year, mainly for doctors, nurses and other health professionals as well as entrepreneurs. 


Anne Kang, the minister of post-secondary education and future skills, called the decrease from the federal government "drastic." 

"We are prioritizing health-care workers in clinical settings," Kang said in an interview, adding that related positions like social workers, therapists and early childhood educators are also part of that group.

The province said most of the remaining 2,900 slots will be used to nominate some of the applications it has already received.

The bulletin says the program anticipates nominating about 100 other people that it thinks are "likely to create high economic impact in B.C." from the registration pool, which currently has more than 10,000 candidates.

WATCH | Why Canada is slashing immigration programs: 

Why Canada’s making massive cuts to immigration | About That

6 months ago
Duration 11:17
The federal government is cutting the number of new permanent and temporary residents to be welcomed into Canada as part of what's been described as a 'dramatic revision' to its immigration plan. Andrew Chang explains the reasons behind the government's stated goal of pausing population growth by breaking down the struggle to keep up with a post-pandemic population boom.

Fiona Famulak, president of the B.C. Chamber of Commerce, said in a statement that Ottawa's decision to cut the number of provincial nomination program slots "will be felt by businesses in every corner of the province."

B.C. needs more, not fewer, "economic immigrants," she said. 

Famulak said the chamber disagrees with the decision to prioritize public sector job vacancies over the needs of the private sector this year.

"The decision to focus the [program] on applicants in the health-care sector unfairly advantages the government's needs over the business community," she said. "We therefore call on the provincial government to rebalance the nominee allocations for 2025 and prioritize economic immigrants as the program was intended."

An older woman with short white hair is seen speaking on a sunny day.
Fiona Famulak, with the B.C. Chamber of Commerce, says the province needs more skilled immigrants, not fewer. (Justine Boulin/CBC)

Last year, then-federal immigration minister Marc Miller announced plans to reduce immigration to alleviate pressures on housing, infrastructure and social services.

Vancouver immigration lawyer Richard Kurland said Tuesday that a lot of people and families "literally bet the farm" on being able to become a Canadian citizen through the nominee program.

"Now, instead of adding people we badly need, we've got to throw people out of the lifeboat because Ottawa cut the number of seats," he said.

Kurland said people locked out of B.C.'s program might consider moving to a different province. Other jurisdictions are also facing cuts to their nominee numbers but will have their own set of rules for who can qualify, he said.

Seated people hold tiny Canadian flags.
Immigrants who will be denied under B.C.'s provincial nominee program could look to move to other provinces, according to an immigration lawyer. (Stephen Lubig/CBC)

"If you're in one of those high-demand occupations that B.C. says it needs, the chances are good that other provinces have the same labour need," he said.

"You'll still have to uproot yourself from B.C., transplant into another province and then hope for the best." 

Kurland is also predicting a continued uptick in refugee claims from people looking for other ways to stay in Canada. 

Kang said she's worried the reduction in the available slots for the nominee program could lead to the province not being able to fill critical roles.

"My fear is that we will not be filling the positions of the doctors and nurses and those who are in clinical work, those in ERs, or health-care workers that are directly working with our patients," she said.