“Promoting French is of prime importance to us,” Immigration Minister Marc Miller said in a statement on Wednesday to announce the new Francophone immigration strategy.
Canada to grant a select group of international students permanent residence upon graduation with pilot program
The initiative, launching Aug. 26, is touted as a flagship measure of the new Francophone immigration strategy meant to boost the French-speaking population outside of Quebec.
“Promoting French is of prime importance to us,” Immigration Minister Marc Miller said in a statement on Wednesday to announce the new Francophone immigration strategy.
Ottawa is launching a new pilot program to attract and retain Francophone international students, providing them with a direct pathway for permanent residency in Canada after graduation.
“Promoting French is of prime importance to us,” Immigration Minister Marc Miller said in a statement on Wednesday to announce the pilot program.
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“We are all the more determined to help more Francophone international students come to Canada and build a future in our dynamic Francophone communities, while contributing to the development of the French-speaking world.”
The majority of French-speaking international students are coming from Africa, the Middle East and the Americas - places historically have staggering low approval rates for study permit applications to Canada.Â
The new program, to be launched officially on Aug. 26, aims to make access to Canada’s international student program “fairer” to this pool of students by offering unique exceptions to certain criteria stipulated for other applicants.
Officials say applicants to the pilot program will be exempted from having to demonstrate that they will leave Canada at the end of their temporary stay.
All study permit applicants are required to show they have $20,635 in their account to cover one year of living expenses in Canada, but this required financial threshold will be adjusted for Francophone applicants in the pilot to reflect 75 per cent of the low-income cut-off associated with the community where their intended school’s main campus is located.
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The pilot participants will have access to government-funded settlement services while in school - something not eligible for other international students - and become permanent residents after obtaining their diplomas or degrees. Their spouses can also accompany them to Canada.Â
Officials say this is a partnership with French-language and bilingual post-secondary learning institutions that are designated to receive Francophone international students, and each will be allocated a limited number of acceptance letters under the program.
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