Asylum seekers need to wait too long

Asylum seekers need to wait too long

Asylum seekers need to wait too long

The arm’s-length agency that processes refugee claims says asylum seekers who cross into Canada today will have to wait almost two years before learning whether they can stay. The Immigration and Refugee Board says wait times are currently at 21 months, but could have climbed even higher without a cash infusion from the federal government. The Liberals set aside $74 million over two years in this the 2018 budget to address a major backlog of asylum claims at the IRB. The board has used the money to hire more than 60 new staff to adjudicate refugee claims and appeals, many of which are coming from an influx of tens of thousands of “irregular” border crossers who have come from the United States through non-official entry points. But the board warns wait times could grow as it deals with a projected 60,000 new claims this fiscal year. Even with the additional staff, the board estimates it will complete work on almost half of its current inventory of 65,000 claims by the end of March 2019. Without the new resources from Ottawa, the board estimated it would have completed 24,000 claims instead of the 32,000 it expects to finalize this year. A year-long review of the IRB released earlier this year found persistent and systemic problems that have undermined the efficiency of the asylum system in Canada. The report’s author, former immigration deputy minister Neil Yeates, recommended fundamental changes to the way the board operates, including a new management structure under the authority of the immigration minister. NDP immigration critic Jenny Kwan said the government has continually starved the IRB of resources, creating a history of problems managing spikes in asylum claims, which the review highlighted. “It is absolutely unconscionable. People’s lives are held in limbo when they’re waiting for these cases to be processed,” she said.

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