Canada's Surging Illegal Migrant Population
"I'm not going to sugar-coat it, we believe there's 500,000 illegal immigrants currently spread across Canada and these individuals are benefiting from taxpayer-funded services.""The federal government is choosing to disregard this number and that's a real problem.""These illegal migrants must be taken into account, as every province is feeling the pressure of Ottawa's mismanagement of the immigration system."Alberta Immigration Minister Joseph Schow
![]() |
| Illegal migrants claiming refugee status True North |
Illegal
immigration in Canada is not taken seriously by the federal government
and Alberta's Immigration Minister urges the imperative that Ottawa stop
ignoring the problem that has wide repercussions across the country in
drawing social support resources from the Canadian taxpaying public to
those present in Canada illegally in numbers large enough to have a
truly disturbing effect in finite services. From medical care to social
housing and the growing use of food banks, to growing unemployment
among young Canadians, the presence of too many new immigrants, refugees
and illegal migrants is producing a deleterious economic and human
resources impact.
Infrastructure
and public services, points out MPP Schow, are under great strain
across the country. Federal officials, he urges, must account for the
estimated number of undocumented migrants in Canada in view of the need
to set immigration targets for the coming year. Recently, federal
officials themselves acknowledged a need to mitigate problems associated
with too many people arriving in too short time-spans, drawing on the
country's social systems and creating shortages in housing while
over-burdening an already-strained medical/health system. Millions of
new arrivals were welcomed in the past several years.
Ottawa
projects a 19 percent reduction in temporary arrivals, and eight
percent drop in permanent resident admissions in the next three years,
through a bolstered immigration level plan. The government has moved to
cap non-permanent resident numbers in Canada below five percent of the
population. A skeptical Schow feels such efforts are likely to fall
short of a sufficient adjustment to make a difference. "If they're leaving out this huge chunk of data (the issue of illegal immigration) how can they set real targets?"
![]() |
| A screengrab from an RCMP video shows people crossing the Manitoba border into Canada. Photograph: Jason Franson/AP |
Immigration,
Refugees and Citizenship Canada disclosed in a briefing note a year ago
that the number of undocumented migrants could be as high as 500,000,
while at the same time admitting that the exact number is unknown. About
114,373 irregular border crossers petitioned to remain in Canada,
according o the federal government, between February 2017 and June of
2025. Lack of reliably hard figures on illegal immigration all the more
reason for Ottawa to diminish its intake of migrants.
58
percent of Canadians, according to a recent poll, feel that mass
deportations have become a necessity to curb the number of people now
living illegally in Canada. The province of Alberta has led the country
in inter-provincial migration and overall population growth in recent
years, Immigration Minister Schow pointed out, with the province's
population having swelled by some 200,000 last year and continuing on
through 2025. A situation that has gone well beyond hampering
individuals in Alberta achieving upward mobility.
"The fact that [the federal government is unaware of the precise number of undocumented migrants] they don't have an exact, or close to exact, number just shows again how badly they've lost control of the system.""People around the world rightly see us as a beacon of hope and opportunity ... and for that exact reason, we have to be mindful that we're growing our population in a way that's strategic."Alberta Minister of Immigration and Jobs, Economy and Trade
Labels: Canada, Employment, Health/Medical, Housing, Illegal Migration, Immigration, Population Rise, Refugees, Social Services



<< Home