Expert ‘taken aback’ by Eby foreign worker claims, says axing program won’t fix woes
VICTORIA — Ending the temporary foreign worker program won’t solve “deep structural problems” with housing and other issues in British Columbia, while it would create “problematic consequences” for labour availability, an immigration expert says.
Irene Bloemraad, co-director of the centre for migration studies at the University of British Columbia, said calls to scrap or reform the worker’s program are an “easy way” to distract from a lack of affordable housing and other woes.
“If tomorrow, there was not a single additional temporary worker or temporary student who arrived in British Columbia, would housing prices magically go down and would we suddenly have fully staffed ERs?” she asked. “I think the answer would be no.”
Her remarks come after B.C. Premier David Eby and federal Opposition Leader Pierre Poilievre both suggested axing the program this week, linking it to youth unemployment and other problems.


