Mother distressed over expiring work permit, nominee delays joins others asking for help
CBC
A mother afraid her family will be forced to leave the country is begging the province for help.
Qin Zuo has lived in Winnipeg with her husband and 10-year-old son for the last three years. She fears they'll have to return to China when her work permit expires in June.
"We are feel very anxious and helpless. When I told my son [about] the serious situation, [that] we may be forced to go home, when he hear this, he cried," Zuo said.
"He don't want to leave here."
Zuo obtained a post-graduation work permit following her studies in the city, but the federal government announced in December it was no longer offering 18-month extensions to those permits, which it had previously offered due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Her family is now among thousands applying to Manitoba's provincial nominee program, which accepts a limited number of applicants each year.
Zuo applied in November but has yet to hear whether her family has been approved.
She spoke to CBC News outside the provincial nominee program's office on Notre Dame Avenue, where about a dozen people gathered to call on the provincial government to expedite its selection process.
"There are many people here like me," Zuo said. "We want to, they give us a solution."
Among them, Tianyu Xie said his young family in China hasn't been able to join him in Winnipeg given how uncertain his situation has become. He's lived here and worked in the social services sector in the city under a post-graduation work permit over the past two years.
"I study here. I work here. I pay tax here, but right now, I can get nothing. That's unfair."
Manitoba's Labour and Immigration Minister Malaya Marcelino says she's in contact with the federal government to find a solution, as the province's economy and labour market desperately need the workers.
"It's an extremely serious issue. We're talking about almost 5,000 people," Marcelino told reporters at the legislative building on Monday.
The provincial nominee program is currently processing about 24,000 applications, which greatly exceeds the spots Manitoba is allotted by the federal government, the minister said last week.