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B.C. Premier Eby wants temporary foreign worker program cancelled or reformed

Eby blamed nationals program for labour market issues and strains on services
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Premier David Eby talked LNG Canada and housing starts in Kitimat on July 30, 2025.

Premier David Eby said the temporary foreign worker program must be changed or cancelled to protect Canadian jobs and stop immigrants from taking advantage of charitable services.

"The temporary foreign worker program is not working," he said. "It should be cancelled or significantly reformed."

In remarks at an unrelated press conference in Surrey on Thursday, Sept. 4, Eby blamed Ottawa for allowing a program to continue to put "strains"  on the provincial budget, saying the majority of people using food banks have been in the country for less than two years and homeless shelters are filling up with new arrivals instead of people already living on the streets.

"It's time for a serious and adult conversation about addressing these immigration issues in our province and in the country," he said. "We can't have an immigration system that fills up our homeless shelters and our food banks."

Prime Minister Mark Carney said earlier in the week that the program is under review, which Eby welcomed. Meanwhile, federal Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre said the program should be cancelled. Like Poilievre, Eby called for change with protections to enable farmers to keep hiring the workers they need.

Eby blames high levels of youth unemployment and other problems on temporary foreign workers, also linking the workers to overburdened school systems and the lack of affordable housing.

"We can't have an immigration system that outpaces our ability to build schools and housing," he said.

Eby also suggested there is fraud within the system that requires prospective employers to conduct a labour market impact assessment to be allowed to hire these workers.

"Here in Surrey, we see the sale of temporary labour market assessments, temporary farm worker labour market assessments," he said.



Mark Page

About the Author: Mark Page

I'm the B.C. legislative correspondent for Black Press Media's provincial news team.
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