They are abuses most in town likely think happen somewhere else, but labour trafficking and labour exploitation occur right here in the Sea to Sky, according to several experts in the field.
Information about these abuses and what legal help is available was shared on June 18 in a Migrant Workers' Centr Zoom presentation: "Preventing and Responding to Labour Trafficking and Labour Exploitation."
The presentation was put on by the Migrant Workers' Centre to assist local settlement service providers such as the Squamish Welcome Centre and Settlement Service and the Whistler Welcome Centre.
"We often hear people saying,'Does this happen in the Sea to Sky?' Yes, it is very real and there are many workers in the Sea to Sky region facing this every day," said Hasrat Grewal Gill, settlement and outreach worker with the Squamish Welcome Centre and Settlement Service.
As of the 2016 census, 10% of Whistler's population and about four percent of Squamish's population were temporary foreign workers.
"But we also know that we have a drastic increase in the number of temporary foreign workers accessing our services in the last few years," Gill said.
"Since the Sea to Sky region is home to tourism and hospitality industries, more temporary foreign workers are trying to stay permanently, [there's] more on two to three-year visas, and many businesses are relying more and more on temporary foreign workers to keep our businesses going — and in the meantime, employers are sponsoring in more people to answer the job gap."
What are we talking about, exactly?
A migrant worker is anyone in Canada with precarious immigration status including any non-permanent resident who is working or wants to work.
"It can include international workers, temporary foreign workers, someone who is here on visitor status who is working or who wants to work; it could include someone without status," said Juliana Dalley, a staff lawyer with the Migrant Workers' Centre in Vancouver. The non-profit provides free legal assistance to migrant workers in B.C.
"Someone who is recruited to come to Canada from abroad with the promise of a job that is going to be paid at certain conditions, but when [the person] arrives in Canada... finds out that some of these promises were not true," Dalley explained.
Temporary foreign workers are here on work permits granted by the federal government under the Temporary Foreign Worker program. They are a subset of the migrant workers.
Migrant workers are vulnerable to labour exploitation for several reasons, including that Canadian work permits are often tied to a particular employer.
That means it is hard for those workers to change employers if they are being abused.
Migrants who come from countries experiencing political instability and who have come to Canada to seek a better life are also vulnerable to being exploited.
Newcomers also may not know anyone in town and can face language and cultural barriers and may not be familiar with Canadian laws.
Some have also accumulated debt to get to Canada, so are motivated to work and not complain.
The stereotype of what human trafficking is doesn't always match the reality, Dalley said.
"In our ideas, it might involve moving across borders, people in the back of a van — and in some cases it can look like that," she said, but not always.
The Palermo Protocol, "essentially defines human trafficking as recruiting, transporting, transferring or receiving people by the means of the use of force, or the threat of the use of force, coercion, abduction, fraud or deception or the abuse of power for the purposes of exploitation," Dalley said, referencing the protocol, which is the internationally accepted definition of human trafficking.
An example could be a person recruited from Dubai, who signed an agreement to work at a Canadian hotel, full time for a legal wage.
When the person arrives, however, the employer says the trip to Canada and everything involved with bringing the person here has to be reimbursed and so the amount owing is docked from the worker's pay, making it less than minimum wage.
The difference between labour exploitation and labour trafficking is coercion.
"The person feeling that their actions are constrained by external forces," Dalley said.
"Even if there is no direct threat, there may be coercion and the feeling that their choices are constrained by systemic forces."
Examples of threats can be if the worker doesn't work overtime for free, the employer threatens to have the person deported.
If the employer holds their passport or other ID, workers can't access services, in many cases. "That enforces isolation on that person and makes them fearful," Dalley said.
"While it is illegal in Canada to charge workers a fee for finding them employment, in reality, many of our clients have been charged fees," said Dalley. "These are usually paid overseas and for a variety of reasons it is often very difficult to get any enforcement of that worker’s right."
Canadian immigration laws complicate matters.
"If we have a caregiver who has a work permit to work as a caregiver, but the family she is working for says, 'Come to work on our blueberry farm on Sundays,' she is actually violating the terms of her work permit and so Canada Border Services could go after her and seek her removal from Canada," Dalley said.
That fear keeps workers trapped in exploitive situations.
Most common in the Sea to Sky
Gill said in Squamish what the centre sees most are migrant workers charged large, fraudulent recruitment fees by the employers and immigration consultants.
"Of course not all, but some employers and immigration consultants work as a team. They ask for under the table fees," she said, adding she has heard of newcomers who paid between $5,000 to $40,000.
Ideally, this process should not cost the worker more than the consultancy fee of around $1,500 to $2,000. These are mostly workers on employer-specific work permits, or prior international students who are now on a post-grad work permit.
Local agencies also hear of workers who are underpaid, or whose wages are deducted unjustifiably; who are forced to work unpaid overtime, with no health or other benefits and no paid leave.
The risks
The risks are often very high for the worker to report the abuse, even when the abuse is clear, the panelists acknowledged.
"There are a lot of shortcomings of the Canadian legal system," Dalley said.
Two laws that prohibit human trafficking that are often misunderstood, according to Dalley, are the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act and the Criminal Code.
"These are criminal laws so people who are engaged in human trafficking can be prosecuted under these laws," she said.
But since the laws were enacted, only one case in two decades has successfully resulted in a conviction that was not overturned on appeal.
"Canada is really falling behind other jurisdictions, such as the U.K., Australia, and New Zealand when it comes to the response of the criminal justice system," she said.
The Immigration and Refugee Protection Act requires that there be a crossing of a border involved for it to be a crime.
"We know that is not always the case, some trafficking happens purely in Canada, whether it involves migrant workers who are already in Canada on a work permit who is induced to transfer to another employer, or cases that are purely domestic."
The Criminal Code involves domestic cases but requires that the victim has experienced fear for their safety or of their loved ones.
So unless there is a threat of physical harm, the protection can't be pursued.
Thus, victims often have better success seeking civil redress.
Other measures to help
The Employment Standards Branch can help workers where rules are broken on the job.
The courts can help if an employment contract has been broken.
WorkSafeBC can also help if a worker has been forced to do unsafe work or they are terminated for raising a safety concern at the workplace or are injured on the job.
"We at Migrant Workers' Centre, we work in all these different areas and can assist workers depending on what is appropriate," Dalley said.
The centre can also help people who have experienced human rights complaints, for example, if they have been discriminated against trying to find housing.
There are advantages and disadvantages to each type of complaint," said Jeanne Robert, a legal advocate with the centre. "Each complaint and each case is different."
Some temporary quick remedies for protection for victims of trafficking include obtaining a special Temporary Resident Permit (TRP), which gives the victim temporary immigration status in Canada for 180 days. This gives them open work permits — they don't have to stay with one employer — and access to social assistance.
A second temporary option is an Open Work Permit for Vulnerable workers, which allows migrant Workers who are experiencing abuse, or who are at risk of abuse, with a distinct means to leave their employer.
It is important workers speak with a lawyer to help them understand their options.
For victims to get permanent status, there are a couple of options to pursue.
They may be able to apply for permanent residency on humanitarian and compassionate grounds.
"Often, there is a compelling argument that can be made that granting permanent residence in Canada is the only just thing to do in these circumstances," said Dalley, acknowledging there can be a lengthy waiting period to get a decision.
Other victims may meet the criteria for refugee protection, Dalley said.
Advice
Migrant workers should keep detailed records, including text messages, emails and the like, even if things are going well with an employer.
"Sometimes the situation can change, because we know processing can take time. Sometimes it takes various months. We don't always remember everything, so this can be very helpful," said Robert.
For more on this issue or for help, reach out to these centres, which offer their services for free and in confidence:
Squamish Welcome Centre & Settlement Service
Website: https://seatoskycommunity.org
Email: [email protected]
Tel: 604-567-2222
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/squamishwelcomecentre/
Whistler Welcome Centre
Website: https://welcomewhistler.com
Email: [email protected]
Tel: 604-698-5960
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/whistlerwelcomecentre/
Find out more
Here are further resources on this issue: