Date: 20071004
Docket: IMM-842-07
Citation: 2007 FC 1002
BETWEEN:
NENITA ENRIQUEZ
Applicant
and
THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP
AND
IMMIGRATION
Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
Pinard
J.
[1]
This
is an application for judicial review of the decision of an immigration officer
(the Officer), dated February 15, 2007, wherein it was determined that there
were no humanitarian and compassionate (H&C) factors which would allow the
applicant to apply for permanent residence within Canada.
[2]
Nenita
Enriquez, the applicant, is a citizen of the Philippines. She entered
Canada in May 1999
to visit her brother, who was a permanent resident. While she was in Canada she
applied for and received a student visa through the Buffalo visa office.
After completing her studies the applicant received an offer of employment as a
live-in caregiver, and that offer was approved by Human Resources and
Development Canada (HRDC) in February 2000. She received employment
authorization in July 2000 and this authorization was renewed twice. The
applicant applied for permanent resident status in August 2002, and in March
2003 was advised she may not be eligible for permanent resident status because
she failed to meet a requirement of the Immigration and Refugee Protection
Regulations, SOR/2002-227, which requires a person seeking permanent
residence as a member of the live-in caregiver class to have entered Canada in
that capacity.
[3]
The
applicant brought an application for judicial review of the decision rejecting
her application for permanent residence. The application was dismissed and the
Court held that the immigration officer had not committed any reviewable error
in denying her application. At paragraph 10 of that decision, the Court held:
The
fact that the Applicant did not seek entry into Canada
as a member of the live-in caregiver in Canada class cannot be remedied by
subsequent errors or misunderstanding of employees of either HRDC or the
Respondent in assessing the Applicant's status in Canada. She did not apply to enter Canada as
a member of the “live-in caregiver in Canada class”, as defined by the
governing legislation when she entered Canada in 1999, that is the former Act. The
history of the Applicant's receipt of an employment authorization from the
Respondent in 2000 and renewals of that work authorization in 2001 and 2002 may
be relevant upon an application for admission into Canada on humanitarian and compassionate grounds but such
application is not the subject of this application for judicial review.
On
October 13, 2006, the applicant made an H&C application.
[4]
The
applicant submits, inter alia, that the Officer failed to properly
consider the best interests of the children in this case by failing to
recognize that the applicant is the primary caregiver to the Betel children.
[5]
The
Federal Court of Appeal in Hawthorne v. Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration, 2002 FCA 475, held that an H&C decision
will be found to be unreasonable if the officer was dismissive to the best
interests of the child and was not “alive, alert and sensitive” to the best
interests of the child.
[6]
Here,
the Officer based his conclusion that the applicant is not the primary
caregiver to the Betel children on the fact that Ms. Betel said the applicant
was like a second mother to her children. The applicant submits that this
reasoning is unsound, and that the evidence before the Officer established that
the applicant is the children’s primary caregiver and has been since they were
infants.
[7]
In
my view, it was unreasonable for the Officer to interpret Ms. Betel’s statement
that the applicant was like a second mother to her children to mean that she
was not the primary caregiver. Mother and primary caregiver are not synonyms.
Moreover, the evidence indicated that the applicant cared for Ms. Betel and it
is reasonable to assume that if Ms. Betel needed to be cared for by the
applicant, then she could not herself assume the role as a primary caregiver.
[8]
I
agree with the applicant’s further submission that an H&C officer must give
particular consideration to a decision to remove a child’s primary caregiver,
whether the caregiver is a biological parent or not (Momcilovic v.
Canada (M.C.I.), 2005 FC 79, [2005] F.C.J. No. 100 (T.D.) (QL); Jakhu v.
Canada (M.C.I.), 2006 FC 329, [2006] F.C.J. No. 452 (T.D.) (QL)).
[9]
Consequently,
I consider in reading the Officer’s decision that he did not give proper
consideration to the impact the applicant’s departure from Canada would have
on the Betel children. In my view, the applicant has succeeded in establishing
that the Officer was not “alive, alert and sensitive” to the children’s best
interests.
[10]
As
the above conclusion is sufficient to warrant the intervention of the Court, it
will not be necessary to consider the other arguments made by the applicant.
[11]
Consequently,
the application for judicial review is allowed and the matter is remitted to a
different immigration officer for reconsideration.
“Yvon Pinard”
Ottawa,
Ontario
October
4, 2007
FEDERAL COURT
NAME OF COUNSEL AND SOLICITORS OF RECORD
DOCKET: IMM-842-07
STYLE OF CAUSE: NENITA ENRIQUEZ v. THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
PLACE OF
HEARING: Toronto, Ontario
DATE OF
HEARING: September
12, 2007
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT: Pinard J.
DATED: October 4, 2007
APPEARANCES:
Carole Simone
Dahan FOR THE APPLICANT
John Provart FOR
THE RESPONDENT
SOLICITORS
OF RECORD:
Refugee Law
Office FOR THE APPLICANT
375 University
Ave, Suite 206
Toronto, Ontario
M5G 2G1
John H. Sims,
Q.C. FOR THE RESPONDENT
Deputy Attorney
General of Canada