Date: 20111206
Dockets:
A-416-10
A-419-10
A-484-10
Citation: 2011 FCA 339
CORAM: SHARLOW
J.A.
PELLETIER J.A.
STRATAS
J.A.
BETWEEN:
A-416-10
MD. Ali Khan
Appellant
and
Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration
Respondent
BETWEEN:
A-419-10
MD. Khairul
Kabir
Appellant
and
Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration
Respondent
BETWEEN:
A-484-10
Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration
Appellant
and
Syed Imam
Hasan
Respondent
REASONS FOR
JUDGMENT
PELLETIER
J.A.
INTRODUCTION
[1]
Off-shore
applicants for permanent resident visas in the federal skilled worker class are
assessed according to a grid system in which points are awarded for various
criteria, one of which is education. The Immigration and Refugee Protection
Regulations, SOR/ 2002-227 (the Regulations), provide a scale for the
assessment of educational qualifications based on two criteria, educational
credentials and years of full time (or equivalent) study. The issue raised by
this appeal is the application of the second of these criteria.
[2]
These
reasons apply to three appeals which were heard together because they all raise
this issue on substantially the same facts. In all three cases, the applicant
had earned two master’s degrees and had spent more than 17 years in full time
studies. In all three cases, the visa officer
refused their application for a permanent
resident visa because they were only credited with 16 years of full time
studies with respect to their master’s degree, one year short of the 17 year requirement
for a master’s degree stipulated in the Regulations. A judge of the Federal
Court dismissed two of the visa applicants’ applications for judicial review: Kabir
v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2010 FC 995, [2010]
F.C.J No.1258 [Kabir], and Khan v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2010 FC 983, [2010] F.C.J. No. 1224 [Khan].
A different judge of the Federal Court allowed the third judicial review
application: Hasan v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2010 FC 1206, [2010] F.C.J. No. 1500 [Hasan].
[3]
In
Kabir and Khan, the following question was certified:
In assessing points for
education under section 78 of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Regulations,
does the visa officer award points for years of full-time or full-time
equivalent studies that did not contribute to the educational credential being
assessed?
[4]
In
Hasan, the Court certified substantially the same question, but for the
inadvertent omission of the words “of full time”.
[5]
For
the reasons that follow, I would answer the question in the negative, dismiss
the applicants’ appeals in Kabir and Khan, and allow the
Minister’s appeal in Hasan. To avoid unnecessary repetition of the
phrase “the two appellants and the respondent”, I will refer to these
individuals collectively as the visa applicants.
[6]
These
reasons are prepared in the Hasan file (A-484-10) but apply equally to
the Kabir (A-416-10) and Khan (A-419-10) matters. A copy of these
reasons will be placed on each of these files.
THE STATUTORY SCHEME
[7]
In
order to make sense of the visa officer’s decisions, and the Federal Court’s
reasons in the applications for judicial review, it is necessary to appreciate
the statutory scheme.
[8]
Sections
73 to 85 of the Regulations establish a grid for the assessment of persons
seeking admission to Canada as federal skilled workers. The grid is
based on the six criteria listed below; opposite each item is the maximum
number of points which may be awarded for that item:
-education – 25 points
-proficiency in English and
French – 24 points
-experience – 21 points
-age – 10 points
-arranged employment – 10
points
-adaptability – 10 points
The highest possible score is 100 points.
[9]
The
assessment of an applicant’s educational qualifications is dealt with in
subsection 78(2) of the Regulations
78(2) A maximum of 25 points shall be awarded
for a skilled worker’s education as follows:
(a) 5 points
for a secondary school educational credential;
(b) 12 points for a one-year
post-secondary educational credential, other than a university educational
credential, and a total of at least 12 years of completed full-time or
full-time equivalent studies;
(c) 15 points
for
(i) a
one-year post-secondary educational credential, other than a university
educational credential, and a total of at least 13 years of completed
full-time or full-time equivalent studies, or
(ii) a
one-year university educational credential at the bachelor’s level and a
total of at least 13 years of completed full-time or full-time
equivalent studies;
(d) 20 points for
(i) a two-year post-secondary educational
credential, other than a university educational credential, and a total of at
least 14 years of completed full-time or full-time equivalent studies,
or
(ii) a
two-year university educational credential at the bachelor’s level and a
total of at least 14 years of completed full-time or full-time
equivalent studies;
(e) 22 points
for
(i) a three-year post-secondary educational
credential, other than a university educational credential, and a total of at
least 15 years of completed full-time or full-time equivalent studies,
or
(ii) two
or more university educational credentials at the bachelor’s level and a
total of at least 15 years of completed full-time or full-time
equivalent studies; and
(f) 25 points for a
university educational credential at the master’s or doctoral level and a
total of at least 17 years of completed full-time or full-time
equivalent studies.
|
78(2) Un maximum de 25 points
d’appréciation sont attribués pour les études du travailleur qualifié selon
la grille suivante :
a) 5
points, s’il a obtenu un diplôme d’études secondaires;
b) 12 points, s’il a obtenu un
diplôme postsecondaire — autre qu’un diplôme universitaire — nécessitant une
année d’études et a accumulé un total d’au moins douze années d’études à
temps plein complètes ou l’équivalent temps plein;
c) 15 points, si, selon le
cas :
(i) il a obtenu un diplôme
postsecondaire — autre qu’un diplôme universitaire — nécessitant une année
d’études et a accumulé un total de treize années d’études à temps plein
complètes ou l’équivalent temps plein,
(ii) il a obtenu un diplôme
universitaire de premier cycle nécessitant une année d’études et a accumulé
un total d’au moins treize années d’études à temps plein complètes ou
l’équivalent temps plein;
d) 20
points, si, selon le cas :
(i) il a obtenu un diplôme
postsecondaire — autre qu’un diplôme universitaire — nécessitant deux années
d’études et a accumulé un total de quatorze années d’études à temps plein
complètes ou l’équivalent temps plein,
(ii) il a obtenu un diplôme
universitaire de premier cycle nécessitant deux années d’études et a accumulé
un total d’au moins quatorze années d’études à temps plein complètes ou
l’équivalent temps plein;
e) 22 points, si, selon le
cas :
(i) il a obtenu un diplôme postsecondaire — autre qu’un
diplôme universitaire — nécessitant trois années d’études et a accumulé un
total de quinze années d’études à temps plein complètes ou l’équivalent temps
plein,
(ii) il a obtenu au moins deux
diplômes universitaires de premier cycle et a accumulé un total d’au moins
quinze années d’études à temps plein complètes ou l’équivalent temps plein;
f) 25
points, s’il a obtenu un diplôme universitaire de deuxième ou de troisième
cycle et a accumulé un total d’au moins dix-sept années d’études à temps
plein complètes ou l’équivalent temps plein.
|
[10]
The
rules for the assessment of multiple educational qualifications are found at
subsections 78(3) and (4) of the Regulations.
78(3) For the purposes of subsection (2),
points
(a) shall
not be awarded cumulatively on the basis of more than one single educational
credential; and
(b) shall be awarded
(i) for the purposes of paragraphs (2)(a)
to (d), subparagraph (2)(e)(i) and paragraph (2)(f),
on the basis of the single educational credential that results in the highest
number of points, and
(ii) for the purposes of subparagraph (2)(e)(ii),
on the basis of the combined educational credentials referred to in that
paragraph.
Special circumstances
(4) For the purposes of
subsection (2), if a skilled worker has an educational credential
referred to in paragraph (2)(b), subparagraph (2)(c)(i)
or (ii), (d)(i) or (ii) or (e)(i) or (ii) or
paragraph (2)(f), but not the total number of years of
full-time or full-time equivalent studies required by that paragraph or
subparagraph, the skilled worker shall be awarded the same number of points
as the number of years of completed full-time or full-time equivalent studies
set out in the paragraph or subparagraph.
|
78(3) Pour l’application du
paragraphe (2), les points sont accumulés de la façon suivante :
a) ils
ne peuvent être additionnés les uns aux autres du fait que le travailleur
qualifié possède plus d’un diplôme;
b) ils sont attribués :
(i) pour l’application des
alinéas (2)a) à d), du sous-alinéa (2)e)(i)
et de l’alinéa (2)f), en fonction du diplôme qui procure le
plus de points selon la grille,
(ii) pour l’application du sous-alinéa (2)e)(ii),
en fonction de l’ensemble des diplômes visés à ce sous-alinéa.
Circonstances spéciales
(4) Pour l’application du
paragraphe (2), si le travailleur qualifié est titulaire d’un diplôme visé à
l’un des alinéas (2)b), des sous-alinéas (2)c)(i)
et (ii), (2)d)(i) et (ii) et (2)e)(i) et (ii) ou à
l’alinéa (2)f) mais n’a pas accumulé le nombre d’années
d’études à temps plein ou l’équivalent temps plein prévu à l’un de ces
alinéas ou sous-alinéas, il obtient le nombre de points correspondant au
nombre d’années d’études à temps plein complètes — ou leur équivalent temps
plein — mentionné dans ces dispositions.
|
[11]
The
definition of educational credential is found at section 73 of the Regulations.
“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.
|
« 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 de tels établissements dans le pays de délivrance de ce diplôme
ou certificat.
|
[12]
With
these provisions in mind, I turn to the facts underlying these appeals.
FACTS
[13]
All
three visa applicants are citizens of Bangladesh who applied for
permanent resident visas as members of the federal skilled worker class. All
have educational credentials awarded by Bangladeshi institutions of higher
learning. Mr. Hasan has earned three university degrees: a Bachelor of
Commerce, a Master of Commerce in Management and an Executive Master of
Business Administration in Marketing. He has completed, in total, at least 18
years of full time education.
[14]
Mr.
Kabir has to his credit a Bachelor’s degree in Political Science, a Master’s
degree in Political Science, a Master’s degree in Business Administration and a
Diploma in Fashion Merchandising. Mr. Kabir has completed, in total, 18 years
of full time study. While the issue of assessing years of study also arises
with respect to Mr. Kabir’s wife, the same principles apply to her application.
As a practical matter, both of their applications turn on the assessment of Mr.
Kabir’s years of study.
[15]
Mr.
Khan holds a Bachelor of Commerce degree, a Master’s degree in Accounting, a
Master’s degree in Business Administration and a Diploma in Computer
Application Programming. In total, he has spent 19 years in full time studies.
[16]
In
each of these cases, the visa officer credited the applicant with 22 points out
of a possible maximum of 25 points for educational qualifications. The officer
applied the same reasoning in all three cases. Using Mr. Hasan’s application as
an example, the refusal letter he received from the officer stated:
You obtained 22 points for
education based on the evidence that your highest credential is a Master's
degree with the equivalent of 16 years of fulltime
education leading up to the completion of your highest degree (your 2 Masters
[sic] degrees separately), in a recognized post-secondary institution. Note that you cannot cumulate more years of education by
having 2 credentials at the same level.
[17]
The
officer made her reasoning more explicit in the affidavit that she submitted in
the course of Mr. Hasan’s application for judicial review:
I considered the
applicant's education history and concluded that none of his two Masters [sic]
Degrees (commerce and business administration) was in the line of progression
towards the other. I therefore awarded the maximum points for the years of
study leading up to his highest university credential (any of his two Masters
[sic] Degrees taken separately) which is 16 years of full time education and I
awarded 22 points for education.
[18]
The
visa officer’s reference to one credential as not being in the “line of
progression” towards the other is administrative shorthand, meaning that since
educational credentials must be assessed on the basis of the applicant’s single
highest credential (ss. 78(3)(a)), only the years of study required to
obtain that credential are considered by the officer. This meant that since one
master’s degree was not a prerequisite for obtaining the other master’s degree,
Mr. Hasan was only credited for the years of study required to obtain a single
master’s degree. The same reasoning was applied to Mr. Kabir’s Diploma in Fashion
Merchandising, and to Mr. Khan’s Diploma in Application Programming, neither of
which was a prerequisite for their respective master’s degree.
[19]
The
16 years of full time education to which the officer refers in her letter to
Mr. Hasan is the time required to complete a master’s degree in Bangladesh, according
to UNESCO and the Bangladeshi educational authorities. This deference to the
national authorities is mandated by the definition of “educational credential”
under the Regulations.
[20]
The
result in Mr. Hasan’s case, as in the other two cases, was that he failed to
score 67 points, which is the minimum number of points required to be granted a
permanent resident visa. In each case, the applicant would have met the 67
point threshold if he had been awarded the maximum 25 points under the
education factor. In short, the points awarded for the education factor were
determinative of each of these applicants’ request for a permanent resident
visa.
THE DECISIONS UNDER
APPEAL
[21]
In
Khan and Kabir, the Federal Court judge held that even though the
visa applicants had studied for a total of more than the 17 years stipulated in
paragraph 78(2)(f) of the Regulations, the visa officer’s decision to
consider only the 16 years required to achieve a master’s degree in Bangladesh
was reasonable. The Federal Court judge found that this result flowed from
paragraph 78(3)(a) which provides that education is to be assessed on
the basis of a single credential, so that the visa applicants are not entitled
to any credit for a second master’s degree.
[22]
The
Federal Court judge declined to follow another decision of the Federal Court, McLachlan
v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2009 FC 975, [2009]
F.C.J. No. 1183 [McLachlan] in which it was held that subsection 78(4)
of the Regulations required the visa officer to consider whether special
circumstances existed and, if they did, to award the number of points
corresponding to the educational credential achieved, even if the visa officer
considered that the applicant had not completed the required number of years of
study. The judge in the Kabir and Khan cases preferred the
interpretation of subsection 78(4) found in Bhuiya v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2008 FC 878, [2008] F.C.J. No. 1110 [Bhuiya],
in which the Federal Court found that subsection 78(4) allowed the visa officer
to award an applicant the number of points most closely corresponding to the
number of years of full time studies undertaken by the applicant. Thus an
applicant who was credited with 16 years of full time studies would be entitled
to 22 points, which is the number of points awarded to a person with 15 years
of full time studies, the period corresponding most closely to, but not
exceeding, the number of years of full time study attributed to the applicant. This
is, in fact, the number of points awarded to Messrs. Khan and Kabir by the visa
officer.
[23]
In
Hasan, the Federal Court judge declined to follow the reasoning set out
in Khan and Kabir. The judge acknowledged that the “line of
progression” analysis employed by the visa officer was an attempt to bring
clarity to badly worded regulations. Notwithstanding its laudable purpose, the
judge identified the issue as whether this analysis was supported by the
language of the Regulations. In the judge’s view, the two factors mentioned in
paragraph 78(2)(f) must be read disjunctively so that the years of full
time study credited to an applicant are not dependent on a single educational
credential . The judge considered that the visa officer was required to assess
Mr. Hasan’s application on the basis of the second of his two master’s degrees
and to give him credit for all years of full time study, up to and including
the second master’s degree. If this were done, Mr. Hasan, while nominally
getting credit for a single master’s degree (the last), would be granted credit
for the time required to obtain two master’s degrees and would therefore be
entitled to 25 points with respect to the education factor. As a result, the
Federal Court judge allowed Mr. Hasan’s application for judicial review.
THE QUESTION TO BE
DECIDED
[24]
I
reproduce the certified question for ease of reference:
In assessing points for education under
section 78 of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Regulations, does
the visa officer award points for years of full-time or full-time equivalent
studies that did not contribute to the educational credential being assessed?
[25]
It
is necessary to clarify the question somewhat. Just as points are not awarded
for educational credentials alone, nor are they awarded for years of study
alone. The question is the relation between the years of study and the
educational credential which forms the basis of the assessment. In effect, the
issue in this appeal is whether visa officers must only give credit for those
years of study which the national authorities identify as the norm for the
achievement of the educational credential in issue, or whether officers can
recognize other years of study, either under the “line of progression” analysis
or on some other basis.
ANALYSIS
[26]
This
Court has held that the standard of review to be applied to a visa officer’s
decision is correctness: see Patel v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2011 FCA 187, [2011] F.C.J. No. 843 at
para. 27, consequently, the standard of review of the visa
officer’s decisions in these cases is correctness.
[27]
The
issue in this case is the construction of subsections 78(2) and (3) of the
Regulations. The former is a listing of educational credentials and associated
years of full time study, while the latter sets out how those credentials are
to be assessed. In particular, subsection 78(3) deals with two questions: which
educational credential will form the basis of the assessment, and how are the
years of full time (or equivalent) studies to be assessed?
[28]
Which
credential will form the basis of the assessment? Subparagraphs 78(3)(a) and(b)
provide that points shall be awarded on the basis of a single educational
credential, specifically, the one which results in the highest number of points.
[29]
I
note in passing that educational credentials, by themselves, are not a basis
upon which points are awarded. They are awarded on the basis of educational
credentials and years of study. Thus subparagraph 78(3)(b)(i)
must be read as though it said “points shall be awarded on the basis of the
single educational credential that results in the highest number of points,
assuming that the years of study requirement for that credential have been
met”.
[30]
Paragraph
78(3)(a) provides that points shall not be awarded cumulatively on the
basis of more than one single educational credential. I take this to mean three
things. First, the points that would be awarded for the prerequisites to an
educational credential are not to be added to the points awarded for that
credential. This is made clear in the French version of the text, which
provides that points are not to be added one to the other on the basis that the
applicant holds more than one credential.
[31]
For
example, admission to a bachelor’s level program is normally limited to persons
who have a high school diploma. The effect of paragraph 78(3)(a) is that
in awarding points for a bachelor’s degree, one would not add the points
associated with a high school diploma (5 points) to the points awarded for a bachelor’s
degree (15 to 20 points). To hold otherwise would result in double counting in
the sense that the points awarded for the higher credential already account for
the fact that one must first obtain the lower credential.
[32]
The
second point to be taken from paragraph 78(3)(a) of the Regulations is that
points are not awarded for multiple instances of the same credential. Thus a
person who has two bachelor’s degrees would not be entitled to the maximum 25
points on the basis that they were entitled to 20 points for the first
bachelor’s degree plus 20 points for the second. There is a limited exception
to this rule in paragraph 78(2)(e)(ii) to account for certain professional
qualifications, such as law, which requires two bachelor’s degrees.
[33]
Lastly,
the fact that the credential which forms the basis of the assessment is the one
which yields the highest number of points necessarily means that ancillary or
supplementary credentials are not considered. Only the “senior” credential is
considered.
[34]
This
part of the analysis is not contentious. Everyone agrees that a master’s degree
is the highest credential possessed by each of these applicants. None of the visa
applicants argues that they were entitled to the maximum number of points on
the basis that they have two master’s degrees and are thus entitled to double
the points awarded for a single master’s degree. They do argue however that
they are entitled to the maximum number of points because, in the course of
their studies, they accumulated more than the number of years of full time
study stipulated in paragraph 78(2)(f) and thus are entitled to the maximum
25 points for their educational qualifications.
[35]
This
leads to the question of how the years of full time study are to be assessed. The
visa officer only credited the visa applicants with 16 years of full time study
for a master’s degree because UNESCO and the Bangladeshi educational
authorities confirmed that, in Bangladesh, the normal course of
studies for a master’s degree is 16 years. The visa officer’s authority to
impose this limitation is found in the definition of “educational credential”,
quoted above, but reproduced below for ease of reference:
“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.
|
« 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 de tels établissements dans le pays de délivrance de ce diplôme
ou certificat.
|
[36]
The
key words in this provision are “… issued on the completion of a program of
study or training…”. The visa officer is to be guided by the national
authorities not only as to the credentials that are recognized in that
jurisdiction but also as to the course of studies leading to that credential. As
a result, the visa officer was entitled, on the basis of the information
provided by UNESCO and confirmed by the Bangladeshi authorities, to credit the visa
applicants with 16 years of full time studies with respect to their master’s
degree.
[37]
This
takes us to the critical issue in these cases, which is whether the visa applicants
are entitled to any credit for years of full time study in excess of the 16
years required to complete a master’s degree in their country of origin?
[38]
The
visa applicants’ position is that all full time years of study completed in the
successful pursuit of a credential are to be credited to an applicant. In
support of this position, they point to the wording of subsection 78(2) of the
Regulations in which no causal link is made between the educational credential
and the years of full time study. For example, paragraph 78(2)(f) dealing with master’s
degrees reads:
(f) 25 points for a
university educational credential at the master’s or doctoral level and a
total of at least 17 years of completed full-time or full-time
equivalent studies.
|
f) 25 points, s’il a
obtenu un diplôme universitaire de deuxième ou de troisième cycle et a
accumulé un total d’au moins dix-sept années d’études à temps plein complètes
ou l’équivalent temps plein.
|
[39]
The
visa applicants point out that the Minister’s position requires one to treat
the provision as though it reads: “…master’s or doctoral level requiring
a total of at least 17 years …”. If Parliament has chosen not to use those
words, they say, the Court should not read them in.
[40]
The
visa applicants’ position amounts to saying that while points will be awarded
solely on the basis of a single educational credential, the time spent
acquiring other educational credentials is to be considered even if the other
credentials themselves are not.
[41]
The
difficulty with this position is that it too requires reading a number of
limitations into the statutory language. For example, the visa applicants
conceded in argument that a year of full time studies which resulted in a
failure, i.e. which did not advance the student’s candidacy for a particular
educational credential, would not be considered a year of full time studies. So,
for example, a candidate for a master’s degree who had to repeat a year would
not be able to count that year as a year of full time studies. While this is a
sensible position, it is an implied limitation on the otherwise unqualified
words used in subsection 78(2).
[42]
Another
implied limitation may well arise in relation to years spent in a program of
study which is later abandoned. For example, if a candidate begins a master’s
program in engineering, successfully completes one year of studies in that
program and then switches to an unrelated field, the inclusion of that year of
studies in the assessment of the candidate’s education would give the candidate
credit for a year of studies which was unrelated to any educational credential.
This cannot have been Parliament’s intention.
[43]
In
the end, the language used in relation to the years of study requirement is
ambiguous and requires the Court to read in limitations, no matter which
position is adopted. The question is: which limitations are more consistent
with the statutory objectives?
[44]
In
my view, the requirement that a candidate’s assessment be based upon a single
credential together with the prohibition on cumulating points suggests that
Parliament wished to standardize the assessment of educational
credentials, so that the relevant period is the number of years of full time
study (or equivalent) required to obtain the candidate’s highest education
credential in the ordinary course. In that way, all applicants being assessed
for a particular educational credential are assessed on the same basis, no
matter where they obtained that credential.
[45]
This
was the view taken by the Federal Court in Bhuiya, cited above, at
paras. 15 -19:
15 Such
an interpretation of the Regulations is consistent with both the Immigration
Manual, and the policy objectives described in the Regulatory Impact Assessment
Statement or "RIAS" relating to the
Regulations.
16 Dealing
first with the RIAS, this Court has held that although a RIAS is not a part of
Regulations, it is nonetheless a useful tool in analyzing the legislative
intent, as it was prepared as part of the regulatory process: see, for example,
Merck & Co. v. Canada (Attorney General)
(1999), 176 F.T.R. 21 (F.C.T.D.) and Bayer Inc. v. Canada
(Attorney General) (1999), 87 C.P.R. (3d) 293 (F.C.A.).
17 In
this case, a review of the RIAS discloses that the reason for requiring that a
candidate have both a particular degree and a
specified number of years of education was to promote consistent standards in
the assessment of a candidate's education and training, given the range of
education and formal training systems around the world.
18 The
RIAS uses a Master's degree as an example, noting that to qualify for the
maximum number of points for a Master's the candidate must also have 17 years
of education. In other words, the years of education requirement is clearly
intended to establish minimum standards for each type of degree.
19 The
fact that Ms. Bhuiya may have spent one additional year in school after
obtaining her Master's degree does not turn her 16 year Master's degree into a
17 year Master's degree.
[46]
See,
to the same effect, Thomasz v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2010 FC 1159, [2010] F.C.J. No. 1443, at
paras. 24-25.
[47]
In
Hasan, the Federal Court judge rejected the reasoning in Bhuiya,
preferring instead the approach adopted in McLachlan, cited above. In
that case, the Federal Court judge resolved the issue of years of study by
reference to subsection 78(4) of the Regulations which I reproduce below for
ease of reference:
Special circumstances
(4) For the purposes of subsection (2), if a
skilled worker has an educational credential referred to in
paragraph (2)(b), subparagraph (2)(c)(i) or (ii),
(d)(i) or (ii) or (e)(i) or (ii) or paragraph (2)(f),
but not the total number of years of full-time or full-time equivalent
studies required by that paragraph or subparagraph, the skilled worker shall
be awarded the same number of points as the number of years of completed
full-time or full-time equivalent studies set out in the paragraph or
subparagraph.
|
Circonstances spéciales
(4) Pour l’application du
paragraphe (2), si le travailleur qualifié est titulaire d’un diplôme visé à
l’un des alinéas (2)b), des sous-alinéas (2)c)(i)
et (ii), (2)d)(i) et (ii) et (2)e)(i) et (ii) ou à
l’alinéa (2)f) mais n’a pas accumulé le nombre d’années
d’études à temps plein ou l’équivalent temps plein prévu à l’un de ces
alinéas ou sous-alinéas, il obtient le nombre de points correspondant au
nombre d’années d’études à temps plein complètes — ou leur équivalent temps
plein — mentionné dans ces dispositions.
|
[48]
McLachlan involved a
visa applicant with "Scottish Ordinary Grades" plus 2 years of post-secondary
police training. The national standard time for completion of Scottish Ordinary
Grades was 11 years, but the applicant had repeated the final year in order to
achieve higher marks. As a result, he had in fact studied for 12 years at the
secondary school level. The visa officer awarded 15 points for education
pursuant to subparagraph 78(2)(c)(i), which required "a total of at
least 13 years of completed full-time or full-time equivalent studies".
The applicant claimed to be entitled to 20 points pursuant to subparagraph
78(2)(d)(i), which required "a total of at least 14 years of
completed full-time or full-time equivalent studies". The Federal Court
judge set aside the visa officer's assessment, reasoning as follows:
31 The Immigration Officer did not look beyond the words
of subsection 78(2)(c) and (d) and consider all of section 78 of the Regulations or indeed the scheme of the skilled worker
provisions. Her analysis focused on a tallying of effective years of studies without regard to the
level of educational attainment. Educational attainment is usually, but not
always, achieved by methodical progression of years of study. The legislators were
alive to the possibility of a shortfall in years of study in situations where the
educational credential is valid and that special circumstance was addressed in
subsection 78(4) of the IRPA Regulations.
32 The subsection could be better worded; nevertheless it
is sufficiently clear. Stripping out the wordage unrelated to the Applicant, it
reads:
·
... if a
skilled worker has an educational credential referred to in ... subparagraph
... (d)(i) ... but not the total number of years of full-time ... studies
required by that ... subparagraph, the skilled worker
shall be awarded the same number of points as the number of years of
completed full-time or full-time equivalent studies set
out in the subparagraph.
33 The trigger for Section 78(4) is the attainment of an
educational credential. The special circumstances subsection recognizes the educational
attainment of skilled workers with bona fide
educational credentials but not the specified years of study. Special circumstances
could include those who attended state educational systems with shorter primary
and secondary programs than in Canada.
[49]
The
result was that the applicant who had an educational credential but lacked the
required number of years of completed studies applicable to that credential was
nonetheless granted the full point allocation for that credential as though he
satisfied the years of study requirement.
[50]
In
my view, McLachlan is wrongly decided and ought not to be followed. The
interpretation of subsection 78(4) adopted by the Federal Court in that case
cannot be sustained when the disposition is read carefully.
[51]
It
is true, as the Federal Court judge noted in McLachlan, that subsection
78(4) is intended to be a remedial measure and that it is badly drafted. If
subsection 78(4) is applied literally, its effect is rather punitive. It
provides that a person who comes within the subsection shall be awarded the
same number of points as the number of years
of completed full time or full time equivalent studies set
out in the subparagraph. To use paragraph 78(2)(f) as an example,
a candidate who had a master’s degree but lacked the required 17 years of
completed studies would be awarded 17 points since that is the number of years
set out in paragraph 78(2)(f). This is fewer points than the person
would receive if they applied on the basis of either a two year post secondary
education credential (20 points for 14 years of full time studies) or a three
year post secondary educational credential (22 points for 15 years of full time
studies).
[52]
Since
subsection 78(4) is remedial, it is unlikely that this was the result desired
by Parliament. However, this result cannot be avoided by reading the words “as the number of years of completed full-time or
full-time equivalent studies” out of the disposition, as the Federal Court
judge in McLachlan appears to have done, relying on the marginal note
“Special Circumstances” in the official version of the Regulations to do so.
Section 14 of the Interpretation Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. I-21, makes it
clear that marginal notes form no part of an enactment. As a result, the
interpretation of subsection 78(4) set out in McLachlan is fatally
flawed.
[53]
To
summarize, subsections 78(3) and (4) of the Regulations provide that applicants
are to be assessed on the basis of their single highest educational credential,
without cumulating points for other equal or lesser credentials. Where another
credential is a pre-requisite for the higher credential, the years of study
associated with that other credential are included in the program of studies
for the higher credential established by the national authorities. Where the
other credential is not a pre-requisite for the candidate’s highest credential,
the years of study leading to that credential are not to be cumulated with the
years of completed study attributable to the highest credential, since the
candidate’s application is to be assessed on the basis of a single educational
credential.
[54]
If
this is correct, then the “line of progression” analysis employed by visa
officers may not respect the statutory scheme. For ease of reference, I
reproduce below the comments made by the visa officer in the affidavit she
submitted for the purposes of Mr. Hasan’s application for judicial review of
her decision:
I considered the
applicant's education history and concluded that none of his two Masters [sic]
Degrees (commerce and business administration) was in the line of progression
towards the other. I therefore awarded the maximum points for the years of
study leading up to his highest university credential (any of his two Masters
[sic] Degrees taken separately) which is 16 years of full time education and I
awarded 22 points for education.
This suggests that if the visa officer had
found that one of Mr. Hasan’s master’s degrees had been “in the line of
progression” towards the other, Mr. Hasan would have been given additional
credit
for his years of education. If I have
understood the visa officer’s reasoning correctly, I must say that it is
mistaken. Just as one does not get additional credit for having completed high
school before obtaining a bachelor’s degree, the twelve years spent completing
high school cannot be added to the years of study associated with a bachelor’s
degree on the basis a high school diploma is in the line of progression towards
a bachelor’s degree. The years of study required to obtain a pre-requisite to a
degree are already included in the years of study associated with that degree
in the Regulations. Thus the 17 years of full time study associated with a
master’s degree in paragraph 78(2)(f) include the full time years of study
spent acquiring the pre-requisites for that degree. No further credit is
available for years of study in the “line of progression” towards that degree.
[55]
In
the case of these visa applicants, the visa officer found, in each case, that
their application was to be assessed on the basis of a single master’s degree. The
visa officer held that, based on the information provided by UNESCO and the
national authorities that the normal course of studies for a master’s degree in
Bangladesh is 16 years.
In each case, the visa officer concluded that the time spent acquiring the visa
applicants’ other credentials was not to be included in the calculation of the
appellant’s years of full time studies because none of those other credentials
were pre-requisites to the appellant’s master’s degree. The visa officer’s reference
to the “line of progression” analysis made no difference in the result. As a
result, I find that the visa officer committed no error in the assessment of
the visa applicant’s education for the purposes of section 78 of the
Regulations.
CONCLUSION
[56]
In
the result, I would dismiss the appeal in Khan and Kabir and I would
allow the Minister’s appeal in Hasan. I would answer the certified
question as follows:
In assessing points for education under
section 78 of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Regulations,
the visa officer does not award points for years of full-time or full-time
equivalent studies that did not contribute to the educational credential being
assessed. That is, visa officers must give credit only for those years of
study which the national authorities identify as the norm for the
achievement of the educational credential in issue.
"J.D.
Denis Pelletier"