New Quebec immigration plan will force some temporary foreign workers to pass French exam - Action News
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New Quebec immigration plan will force some temporary foreign workers to pass French exam

The immigration plan, which includes the new requirment that some temporary foreign workers pass a French test, is part of the governments plan to stop what Legault and his ministers describe as the decline of the French language in Quebec.

If they want to stay, immigrant workers will have to show they can speak basic French

Politicians at a table.
Quebec Premier Franois Legault, flanked by Immigration Minister Christine Frchette, left, and French Language Minister Jean-Franois Roberge, right, announced updates to the province's immigration plan on Wednesday at the National Assembly. (Jacques Boissinot/The Canadian Press)

Quebec wants some temporary foreign workers to pass a French test to renew their work permits.

Premier Franois Legault, flanked by Immigration Minister Christine Frchette and French Language Minister Jean-Franois Roberge, announced the measure at a Quebec City news conference on Wednesday as he presented the government's updated immigration plan.

"The message will be very clear as much for students as for workers," Legault said. "In the future, if you want to come to Quebec for more than three years, if you want to be received as a permanent immigrant, you need to speak French."

The immigration plan, which includes lower than anticipated target numbers for new Quebec immigrants, and the new rules requiring temporary foreign workers to pass a French testare part of the government's plan to stop what Legault and his ministers describe as the decline of the French language in Quebec.

"Across the board the indicators are red," Roberge said of language data in Quebec.

"French at work, French at home, consumption of culture and media in French, all of that is in decline."

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Legault's CAQ government had previously anticipated increasing the number of permanent immigrants it would accept to 60,000. But, in the updated plan presented on Wednesday, they set their target number at 50,000 for 2024 and 2025.

Normally the government sets projections beyond two years, but this time, Legault said, they wanted to examine the data after accepting 50,000 immigrants per year and see the effect on the French language before deciding whether to set new targets.

Not included in that 50,000 figure, however, are the 6,500 students eligible to immigrate to Quebec through theProgramme de l'exprience qubcoise (PEQ), where they can remain in Quebec after completing a degree ata French-languageuniversity.

The French exam, which temporary foreign workers who are in Quebec under the PTET program (program for temporary foreign workers) will now have to pass if they want to renew their permit after three years, will verify that the workers can converse at a basic level in French. There will be no written component.

It will ensure they can "discuss with their entourage, exchange information on familiar themes, for instance, basic needs, everyday life," Frechette said. "It's important that people who spend several years here even with a temporary status can speak and understand French."

Agricultural workers will be exempt from the exam.

Employers will be required to provide time at work for the workers to learn French, Frechette said. But the details of that requirement are still being ironed out, she said.

Parti Qubecois MNA Pascal Berub, whosesovereignist party has begun to gain ground onthe ruling CAQ in polls, criticized the immigration plan as too broad.

The CAQ is still welcoming too many immigrants, he said, hearkening back to a Legault election promise from 2018 when he vowed to hold immigration to 40,000 people per year.

He also ridiculed the language test requirement.Temporary foreign workers will be able to pass the test if they can order a coffee or a beer in French, Berub said.

"If you can say that, 'three years more,'" he said.

Three politicians standing up.
The Quebec government presented new immigration targets at a press conference on Thursday, including a new requirement for some temporary foreign workers to pass an oral French exam to renew their work permits. It would not apply to agricultural workers. (Jacques Boissinot/The Canadian Press)

The Opposition critic for immigration, Liberal MNA Monsef Derraji, said the government should improve the tools the province has to improve French rather than coming down on immigrants who are too slow to pick up the language.

"The weight of the French language in Quebec can't fall on the shoulders of immigrants," he said.

Franois Vincent, the vice-president of the Quebec branch of the Canadian Federation of Independent Businesses, said the government's immigration target is too low to address the labour shortage in the province.

The language test requirement will also add more red tape for small businesses, he said. He hoped the government would expand the exceptions to the exam to other sectors, not just agriculture. Many temporary foreign workers work in the hospitality and restaurant industries, for example.

"It's a bad decision that will hurt small businesses that have these temporary foreign workers," he said.