Date: 20091110
Docket: IMM-1802-09
Citation: 2009 FC 1145
Ottawa, Ontario, November 10, 2009
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice O'Reilly
BETWEEN:
WEI
WEI JIANG
Applicant
and
THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION
Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
I. Overview
[1]
Ms. Wei Wei Jiang applied for permanent
residence in Canada as a
skilled worker. A visa officer at the Canadian Embassy in Beijing evaluated her application and
scored her 56 points, 11 points short of the threshold for success. Ms. Jiang
argues that the officer erred in the assessment of her education credentials
and asks me to order a reassessment by a different officer. I can find no basis
for overturning the officer’s decision and must, therefore, dismiss this
application for judicial review.
II. Analysis
[2]
The sole question is whether the officer’s
assessment of Ms. Jiang’s educational qualifications was reasonable.
[3]
Ms. Jiang claims that she had acquired two
post-secondary diplomas, each based on two years of study, one from the Shanghai Technician
School (1976-1978) and another from the Li Xin
Accounting Institute (1990-1992). In order to be given credit for these
diplomas, Ms. Jiang had to show that they represented post-secondary
credentials from institutions recognized by the responsible accrediting authority
in China (see s. 73, Immigration and Refugee Protection Regulations, SOR/2002-227).
[4]
The visa officer informed Ms. Jiang that the
appropriate authority in China
was the China Academic Degrees and Graduate Education Development Centre
(CADGEDC). On her own, the officer was able to ascertain from the CADGEDC that
the Li Xin diploma did not qualify because the school was only recognized as a
higher education institution in 2003, long after Ms. Jiang had acquired her
accounting certificate. Ms. Jiang does not dispute that conclusion.
[5]
However, Ms. Jiang maintains that the CADGEDC
can only verify the status of academic credentials and graduate degrees, not
ordinary educational credentials such as her 1978 technical diploma. Further,
Ms. Jiang submits that CADGEDC can only validate credentials acquired after
1995. Accordingly, she attempted to satisfy the requirement for accreditation
by acquiring a certificate from the Shanghai Panel Telecommunications Group
(the organization that succeeded the Shanghai Technician School).
The certificate states that Ms. Jiang was indeed a full-time student from
1976-1978 and achieved a two-year, post-secondary certificate.
[6]
The officer found that Ms. Jiang’s certificate
did not demonstrate that she had obtained a post-secondary credential from an
institution recognized by the responsible authority. According to the officer,
the CADGEDC had been charged with accrediting all post-secondary credentials in
China since 1949 and was,
therefore, the proper authority.
[7]
Ms. Jiang asks the Court to find that the
officer erred when she concluded that her evidence of accreditation was
insufficient and that her explanation for not being able to obtain
accreditation from the CADGEDC was inadequate. In my view, the officer was
entitled to give the evidence provided by Ms. Jiang whatever weight she felt it
deserved. I cannot find her conclusion - that the certificate supplied by Ms.
Jiang was insufficient – was unreasonable. There was no evidence that the
Shanghai Panel Telecommunications Group was a proper accrediting authority; nor
was there evidence that the Shanghai Technician School
was an accredited institution.
[8]
Ms. Jiang also suggested that the officer had a
duty to check with the CADGEDC to see if her 1978 degree qualified under the
Regulations. Since the officer had checked her accounting degree, she could
easily have done the same for her earlier diploma. While the officer might have
been able to find evidence on Ms. Jiang’s behalf, she had no obligation to do
so. The officer gave Ms. Jiang many opportunities to assemble the necessary
documentation. Ms. Jiang cannot complain that she was denied a fair chance to
perfect her application.
III. Conclusion
and Disposition
[9]
I can find no basis for concluding that the
officer erred in the assessment of Ms. Jiang’s educational credentials. I must,
therefore, dismiss this application for judicial review. No question of general
importance arises.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT’S JUDGMENT is
that:
1.
The
application for judicial review is dismissed;
2.
No
question of general importance is stated.
“James
W. O’Reilly”
Annex “A”
Immigration
and Refugee Protection Regulations, SOR/2002-227
73. The following definitions apply in
this Division, other than section 87.1.
“educational credential”
“educational
credential” means any diploma, degree or trade or apprenticeship credential
issued on the completion of a program of study or training at an educational
or training institution recognized by the authorities responsible for
registering, accrediting, supervising and regulating such institutions in the
country of issue.
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Règlement
sur l’immigration et la protection des réfugiés, DORS/2002-227
73. Les
définitions qui suivent s’appliquent à la présente section, à l’exception de
l’article 87.1.
« diplôme »
« diplôme »
Tout diplôme, certificat de compétence ou certificat d’apprentissage obtenu
conséquemment à la réussite d’un programme d’études ou d’un cours de
formation offert par un établissement d’enseignement ou de formation reconnu
par les autorités chargées d’enregistrer, d’accréditer, de superviser et de
réglementer les établissements d’enseignement dans le pays de délivrance de ce
diplôme ou certificat.
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