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Canada has a shortage of therapists in counselling and related specialized therapies, providing opportunities for qualified foreign nationals to gain permanent residence here through occupation-targeted Express Entry system draws.
“As job openings and job seekers are projected to be similar over the 2022 – 2031 period, it is expected that the shortage between labour supply and demand seen in recent years will continue over the projection period,” notes the Canadian Occupational Projection System (COPS) website.
“Job openings are projected to arise primarily from employment growth. Population growth and the rising share of older people will have an important impact on job creation in this occupational group.”
With Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) changing Canada’s Express Entry system to allow it to target 82 jobs in healthcare, technology, trades, transport and agriculture last summer – including therapists in counselling and related specialized therapies – it opened the door to a new pathway to immigration for them.
managers in social, community and correctional services
social workers
career development practitioners and career counsellors (except education)
educational counsellors
kinesiologists and other professional occupations in therapy and assessment
In May this year, Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) made all of these workers eligible for immigration to Canada Express Entry occupation-targeted draws.
The flagship Express Entry selection system had previously only conducted draws based on immigration programs, not by targeting specific occupations.
Occupation-Targeted Draws Aim To Reduce Labour Shortages
“Everywhere I go, I’ve heard loud and clear from employers across the country who are experiencing chronic labour shortages,” said then-Immigration Minister Sean Fraser.
“These changes to the Express Entry system will ensure that they have the skilled workers they need to grow and succeed. We can also grow our economy and help businesses with labour shortages while also increasing the number of French-proficient candidates to help ensure the vitality of French-speaking communities.”
The federal government’s job-hunting and career-planning website, Jobbank, ranks the job prospects of therapists in counselling and related specialized therapies over the next three years as very good, its highest rating, in Ontario and the Yukon and good throughout the rest of the country.
In early November, the Indeed.ca job-hunting website listed 6,983 jobs for therapists across the country.
In Canada, the median hourly wage for therapists in counselling and related specialized therapies is$29 but that varies from a low of $19 right up to $45, reveals Jobbank.
Based on a 37.5-hour work week, that means these workers can expect to earn up to $87,750 annually in Canada.
FST, FSW and CEC Now More Responsive To Labour Market Needs
Candidates hoping to immigrate through Express Entry occupation-targeted draws need at least six months of continuous work experience in Canada or abroad within the past three years in one of these occupations to be eligible, an experience that can have been gained while working in Canada as temporary foreign workers with work permits or as an international student with a student visa.
Canada first signalled its intention to start occupation-specific draws through Express Entry in June last year, when changes were made to the Immigration, Refugee and Protection Act to allow invitations based on occupations and other attributes, such as language ability.
The majority of Canada’s provinces have been issuing occupation-specific invitations for several years.
Under the changes to the act, the immigration minister is required to consult provinces and territories, members of industry, unions, employers, workers, worker advocacy groups, settlement provider organizations, and immigration researchers and practitioners, before announcing new categories.
IRCC must also report to parliament each year on the categories that were chosen and the reason for the choices.
Employment and Social Development Canada (ESDC) says the number of occupations facing shortages doubled between 2019 and 2021. From 2018 to 2022, federal high-skilled admissions accounted for between 34 and 40 per cent of overall French-speaking admissions outside Quebec, which manages its own immigration intake.