Docket: IMM-6341-13
Citation:
2015 FC 115
Toronto, Ontario, January 29, 2015
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Diner
BETWEEN:
|
JASVIR SINGH
|
Applicant
|
and
|
THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION CANADA
|
Respondent
|
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
I.
Overview
[1]
This is an application for judicial review
pursuant to subsection 72(1) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act,
SC 2001, c 27 [IRPA], of the visa officer’s [Officer] decision which
refused the Applicant’s application for a work permit.
II.
Facts
[2]
This case concerns the refusal of a work permit
application. The Applicant is a citizen of India, who migrated to Italy over 10 years ago and became a permanent resident in Italy.
The Applicant was
offered a job in Canada, based on his work experience and English ability, as a
heavy truck driver. The employer was aware that a high level of English is not
required to effectively complete the job duties. Specifically, the job offer
stated, “driving and operating trucks, maintaining and
reading log books, operate vehicle with all rules and regulations of the road
and load being carried” (Job Offer and Contract, Certified Tribunal
Record, p 18).
[3]
In February 2013, the Applicant applied for a work
permit in Canada. He submitted a positive Labour Market Opinion [LMO], job
offer and contract, proof of residency in Italy, experience letter indicating
current income (citing driving experience in Italy), bank statement, proof of
Italian truck driver’s license, and IELTS language test results.
[4]
The employer was aware that the Applicant would
need to convert his Italian truck driver license to a Canadian license and
obtain the Air Brake Endorsement once he got to Canada.
III.
Decision
[5]
On August 29, 2013, the Officer refused the
application for a work permit [Decision] because the Applicant failed to
demonstrate that he adequately met the job requirements of his prospective
employment. The Officer cited:
• insufficient
evidence of employment to be satisfied of trucking ability;
• low
level of education and no satisfactory evidence of ability to communicate in
English to the degree required to perform the job in Canada in a safe and
efficient manner; and
• failing
to provide a drivers license of the type required in the LMO, nor the Air Brake
Endorsement.
[6]
The officer was also unsatisfied that the Applicant
would leave Canada by the end of the period authorized for his stay.
IV.
Issues
[7]
The Applicant raised two key grounds in this judicial
review:
1.
whether there were unreasonable findings of fact;
and
2.
whether there was a breach of procedural
fairness.
V.
Parties’ Positions
[8]
With respect to the unreasonability of the
decision (the first issue), the Applicant contends that the language
requirements were arbitrarily decided, in that there is no measure that the
Officer could point to on the levels required, and that the Officer made the
decision arbitrarily, given the Applicant’s IELTS scores (average of 4.0 across
the four measures).
[9]
The LMO confirmation letter says oral and
written English is required but does not provide the level of proficiency
required. The National Occupation Classification [NOC] description does not
require any particular (and certainly not an advanced) level of English. And
the duties in the job offer letter only mandated basic English skills.
[10]
Second, the Applicant argues that the
insufficiency finding with respect to evidence of past job experience was also
unreasonable. The Applicant provided evidence of 10 years of truck driving
experience in Italy, a letter of employment, and proof of his Italian driver’s
license.
[11]
Third, the Applicant argues that the finding that
the Officer was not satisfied the Applicant would leave Canada at the end of
the period authorized in the work permit was unreasonable, given that there was
nothing in the evidence to suggest that the Applicant would not abide by
Canadian immigration law. It was unreasonable for the Officer to provide no
basis for his conclusions that the Applicant would remain in Canada. The evidence of his stay in Italy, LMO and ability to apply for the Canadian Experience
Class indicated otherwise (see, for instance Zhang v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2006 FC 1381 at para 45).
[12]
With regard to the second issue, the Applicant
submits that the Officer breached the duty of procedural fairness by failing to
provide the Applicant with the opportunity to address the Officer’s concerns
with respect to the issues above (language, work experience, and temporary
intent). The Applicant, in his written materials, relies on Gedeon v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2004 FC 1245 at paras 101-102.
[13]
In response to the first issue, the Respondent
submits that the Officer’s conclusions were reasonable. It was reasonably open
to the Officer on the record to find that the Applicant was not a genuine
temporary resident because he had not submitted sufficient evidence that he
would be able to perform the duties of his prospective job in Canada. Also, since the Applicant failed to establish his ability to perform the duties of
his prospective job, it was reasonable for the Officer to conclude that he was
not a genuine temporary resident (including that he would not have proper means
to support himself).
[14]
It was also open to the Officer on the record to
conclude that the Applicant had not established that he could perform the
duties of his prospective employment. The mere fact of a positive LMO is not
determinative of an Applicant’s ability to perform the work sought: the visa
officer is under a duty to perform an independent assessment of that ability (Grewal
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2013 FC 627 [Grewal]).
In this case, there was insufficient evidence of the Applicant’s truck driving
ability. Further, the Officer’s assessment of the Applicant’s language ability
was relevant to the assessment of the Applicant’s ability to perform his job,
and the assessment was reasonable. Officers are entitled to determine that an
Applicant requires a language ability different from that set forth in the LMO
(Grewal at para 9; CIC’s FW1 Temporary Foreign Worker Guidelines, s 8.3).
[15]
On the procedural fairness issue, the Respondent
submits that the Applicant was not entitled to an opportunity to address the
Officer’s concerns, because the Officer’s concerns arose directly from the
Applicant’s failure to satisfy the requirement of IRPA and the
Regulations, rather than from the credibility, accuracy or genuine nature of
the information he submitted (Hassani v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2006 FC 1283 at para 24 [Hassani]).
VI.
Analysis
[16]
I agree with the Respondent’s arguments in
response to each of these points, namely that the Decision was reasonable on
each of the three items raised in issue 1, as well as procedurally fair.
[17]
First, it was reasonable for the Officer to
request and consider language scores. The job offer stated that the Applicant needed
to read and maintain log books, and understand the rules of the road. It was
therefore reasonable for the Officer to find that a certain level of English
was required, and that the Applicant’s language scores were insufficient to do
the job in a safe manner.
[18]
Grewal, above, is on all fours with this case. The same question was being asked
in that decision of Justice Mosley, which was whether it was open to the visa
officer to determine the language level required for a position. In that case,
Mr. Grewal had applied as a temporary foreign worker. His application was
rejected as the visa officer was concerned that he might overstay his permit
and found that he did not have a sufficient command of English to carry out the
duties of the truck driver position. Mr. Grewal had equal or higher IELTS
results than the Applicant herein in each of the four domains of listening,
reading, writing and speaking (although the average score of 4.0 was somehow
identical for both Applicants).
[19]
Justice Mosley found that the officer in Grewal
clearly thought about the language requirements and explained why she
considered that a greater level of English ability was required. He found that
the visa officer’s decision that “for this particular job
Bunel 5 was required, did not diverge so far from the predictable as to be
procedurally unfair in the absence of a waring letter” (at para. 20
Grewal). Justice Mosley also wrote:
17 Findings on language levels for temporary foreign workers are
highly discretionary decisions, on which there is little jurisprudence. Part 11
of the IRPR ("Workers", sections 194-209), under which the present
case falls, does not provide guidance on assessing language ability. The visa
officer was required to make findings based on the evidence before her and
there is no evidence in the present case that she exercised her discretion
capriciously or unreasonably.
[20]
A positive LMO is not determinative of how a visa
officer is to exercise his or her discretion, and visa officers are entitled to
determine that an applicant requires language ability different from that set
forth in the LMO and job offer if relevant to the performance of the job
duties. After all, the LMO portion of the process is to test a labour market
need, and not the attributes of the individual: that is what the visa
application is for: (see Chen v Canada (MCI), 2005 FC 1378, at para. 12; and
Chhetri v Canada (MCI) 2011 FC 872, at para. 17).
[21]
In addition, I note that in this case, the applicable
version of the CIC policy manual at the time of decision states that:
Immigration officers should not limit their
assessment of language, or other requirements to perform the work sought,
solely to those described in the [LMO]. However,
the language requirements stated in the LMO should be part of the officer’s
assessment of the applicant’s ability to perform the specific work sought
because it is the employer’s assessment on the language requirement(s) for the
job.
Additionally, the officer can consider:
• the
specific work conditions and any arrangements the employer has made […]; and
• terms
in the actual job offer, in addition to general requirements set out in the
[NOC] description […]
[Emphasis added] (FW1: Foreign Worker Manual, s
8.3)
[22]
I also agree with the Respondent that the other
findings of the Officer were reasonable. The job offer letter was insufficient
to prove that the Applicant could fulfill the job duties. The letter stated
that he worked in Italy only as a driver, not a truck driver, and does not
describe his duties in Italy. Therefore, we do not know if the work in Italy was analogous to the intended work in Canada, and/or whether there were English language
requirements there.
[23]
In terms of the finding on temporary intent,
that must be viewed contextually. It cannot be isolated. When one considers
the fact that the Officer’s finding is that the Applicant would not be able to
fulfil the job duties, it follows that he would not be able to fulfill the
terms of his temporary residence status. The presumption that foreign
nationals seeking to enter Canada are immigrants would therefore not be
rebutted (see Obeng v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2008 FC 754 at para 20; Danioko v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2006 FC 479 at para 15; Ngalamulume v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2009 FC 1268 at para 25, and Grewal as
cited above).
[24]
A visa officer does not need to provide
extensive reasons (Pacheco v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2010 FC 347 at para 36. The Officer provided sufficient
reasons in this case (Newfoundland and Labrador Nurses’ Union v Newfoundland and Labrador (Treasury Board), 2011 SCC 62).
[25]
In terms of the procedural fairness issue, the Applicant
was not entitled to an opportunity to address the Officer’s concerns, because
the Officer’s concerns arose directly from the Applicant’s failure to satisfy
the requirements of IRPA and the Regulations (i.e. whether the Applicant
was able to perform the work sought (see Hassani, above, at para 24)) rather
than the “credibility, accuracy or genuine nature of
information submitted”, which may have required an opportunity to
address the Officer’s concerns. It was Applicant’s onus to put forward
sufficient materials to satisfy the Officer that he could fulfil the job
duties, and he did not do so.
VII.
Conclusions
[26]
It is my conclusion that the Decision was
reasonable. Ultimately, the mere fact of having a positive LMO is not determinative
of the Applicant’s ability to perform the work sought, and the Officer properly
undertook her duty to perform an independent assessment, including with respect
to language and the other factors considered above. Further, there was no
breach of procedural fairness in not giving the Applicant an opportunity to
address the Officer’s concerns in this case.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT’S JUDGMENT is that the
Application is dismissed. No questions were raised for certification.
"Alan Diner"