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Canada will take in 10,000 parent, grandparent

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Canada will take in 10,000 parent, grandparent sponsorship applications this year


Misc CDN | 206769 hits | Jan 09 2:42 am | Posted by: martin14
27 Comment

Immigration Minister John McCallum confirms that 10,000 applications for reunification of parents and grandparents will be accepted this year, despite a 5,000 annual cap that was in place when the Liberal government re-opened the program earlier this week

Comments

  1. by avatar martin14
    Sat Jan 09, 2016 10:45 am
    Unreal.

  2. by avatar bootlegga
    Sat Jan 09, 2016 4:17 pm
    So they're increasing the number of sponsorships from 2% to 4% (10k out of 250k immigrants)?

    Meh...

  3. by Lemmy
    Sat Jan 09, 2016 4:20 pm
    Why should we be outraged, Marty? This affects you/me how?

  4. by avatar andyt
    Sat Jan 09, 2016 4:23 pm
    Bringing in people who are a drain on our social and medical systems but have never paid taxes certainly affects all of us. Lots of gnashing of teeth about our aging population and how the young people will have to support us. Why bring in more?

  5. by Lemmy
    Sat Jan 09, 2016 4:26 pm
    It'll costs you an extra 3 cents. I'll toss in 6 and cover for both us, you cheap prick.

  6. by avatar bootlegga
    Sat Jan 09, 2016 4:36 pm
    "andyt" said
    Bringing in people who are a drain on our social and medical systems but have never paid taxes certainly affects all of us. Lots of gnashing of teeth about our aging population and how the young people will have to support us. Why bring in more?


    Wrong.

    They will pay all sorts of taxes from day one, including income and sales taxes - AND they don't qualify for CPP/OAS/welfare or many other social programs for a full decade after they land.

    The only thing they will qualify for is health care, which most Canadians deem a right, not a benefit. And it's not like they said they're going to allow in 10,000 90 year old grannies and grandpas - they said parents and grandparents. Certainly some will need to use our health care system, but not all of them and not right away.

    They also have to live somewhere, eat something, have a way to go places (bus or car), and will need clothes and all the other things necessary for life in Canada. Even senior citizens can provide economic benefit by providing child care, allowing both parents to work (higher income taxes, more purchasing power for the family, etc).

    That means most, if not all of them, will economically contribute to the country and not be the leeches as you automatically presume they will be.

  7. by avatar martin14
    Sat Jan 09, 2016 4:44 pm
    "Lemmy" said
    It'll costs you an extra 3 cents. I'll toss in 6 and cover for both us, you cheap prick.



    Remember andy, that 6 cents also comes out of public money that you already paid for.

    So now you pay twice. Or three times. :lol: :lol:

  8. by Lemmy
    Sat Jan 09, 2016 4:48 pm
    "bootlegga" said
    Wrong.

    They will pay all sorts of taxes from day one, including income and sales taxes - AND they don't qualify for CPP/OAS/welfare or many other social programs for a full decade after they land.

    The only thing they will qualify for is health care, which most Canadians deem a right, not a benefit. And it's not like they said they're going to allow in 10,000 90 year old grannies and grandpas - they said parents and grandparents. Certainly some will need to use our health care system, but not all of them and not right away.

    They also have to live somewhere, eat something, have a way to go places (bus or car), and will need clothes and all the other things necessary for life in Canada. Even senior citizens can provide economic benefit by providing child care, allowing both parents to work (higher income taxes, more purchasing power for the family, etc).

    That means most, if not all of them, will economically contribute to the country and not be the leeches as you automatically presume they will be.

    Not to mention that these grandparents have children and grandchildren who will be better citizens when they have their families with them. We want new Canadians to have the support and love of their families because, well, that's what a happy, productive, peaceful life is all about. Such small-mindedness around this whole issue.

  9. by avatar Brenda
    Sat Jan 09, 2016 4:48 pm
    "bootlegga" said
    Bringing in people who are a drain on our social and medical systems but have never paid taxes certainly affects all of us. Lots of gnashing of teeth about our aging population and how the young people will have to support us. Why bring in more?


    Wrong.

    They will pay all sorts of taxes from day one, including income and sales taxes - AND they don't qualify for CPP/OAS/welfare or many other social programs for a full decade after they land.

    The only thing they will qualify for is health care, which most Canadians deem a right, not a benefit. And it's not like they said they're going to allow in 10,000 90 year old grannies and grandpas - they said parents and grandparents. Certainly some will need to use our health care system, but not all of them and not right away.

    They also have to live somewhere, eat something, have a way to go places (bus or car), and will need clothes and all the other things necessary for life in Canada. Even senior citizens can provide economic benefit by providing child care, allowing both parents to work (higher income taxes, more purchasing power for the family, etc).

    That means most, if not all of them, will economically contribute to the country and not be the leeches as you automatically presume they will be.
    You are absolutely right.

    I have no right to OAS either yet. I have to have been here for at least 10 years and it will be calculated.
    The 21 years I was NOT here since my 15th, I will not get OAS for. I will get the Dutch equivalent. Which I will spend HERE.

  10. by avatar andyt
    Sat Jan 09, 2016 8:22 pm
    OAS is not based on the years of work you put in, that's CPP. OAS is a supplement for lower income Seniors, it's strictly income based.

  11. by Thanos
    Sat Jan 09, 2016 8:28 pm
    "Lemmy" said
    Wrong.

    They will pay all sorts of taxes from day one, including income and sales taxes - AND they don't qualify for CPP/OAS/welfare or many other social programs for a full decade after they land.

    The only thing they will qualify for is health care, which most Canadians deem a right, not a benefit. And it's not like they said they're going to allow in 10,000 90 year old grannies and grandpas - they said parents and grandparents. Certainly some will need to use our health care system, but not all of them and not right away.

    They also have to live somewhere, eat something, have a way to go places (bus or car), and will need clothes and all the other things necessary for life in Canada. Even senior citizens can provide economic benefit by providing child care, allowing both parents to work (higher income taxes, more purchasing power for the family, etc).

    That means most, if not all of them, will economically contribute to the country and not be the leeches as you automatically presume they will be.

    Not to mention that these grandparents have children and grandchildren who will be better citizens when they have their families with them. We want new Canadians to have the support and love of their families because, well, that's what a happy, productive, peaceful life is all about. Such small-mindedness around this whole issue.

    There's no way that the Canadian experience wasn't enriched from all the contributions this particular family made to now-theirs country.



    Diversity - is there anything it can't do? :evil:

  12. by Lemmy
    Sat Jan 09, 2016 8:34 pm
    "Thanos" said
    There's no way that the Canadian experience wasn't enriched from all the contributions this particular family made to now-theirs country.
    Diversity - is there anything it can't do? :evil:

    And for every family (is there another you can cite as example besides this?) that turned out shitty, I can cite tens of thousands who are doing right by all measures. We grow a lot higher percentage home-born assholes than we do with refugees and immigrants. Fail.

    It's just a good thing that the people actually making these sorts of decisions on Canadians' behalves are smarter than the small-minded knee-jerkers on CKA.

  13. by Thanos
    Sat Jan 09, 2016 8:37 pm
    Won't be my finger on the trigger, or on the remote that sets off the bomb, when one of them eventually shows his true colours. Keep that in mind in your rush to judge who makes a great citizen.

  14. by Lemmy
    Sat Jan 09, 2016 8:40 pm
    Yes it will. Your xenophobia will make people hate you (and, by association, me) back. But you'll be the one starting it.



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