Docket: IMM-3108-16
Citation:
2017 FC 303
Ottawa, Ontario, March 23, 2017
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Gleeson
BETWEEN:
|
KAREL ONDRAS,
MALGORZATA
ONDRASOVA,
ANETA
ONDRASOVA, TOMAS ONDRAS, AND RUZENA ONDRASOVA
|
Applicants
|
and
|
THE MINISTER OF
CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
|
Respondent
|
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
I.
Overview
[1]
The applicants, Mr. Karel Ondras, his wife,
Malgorzata Ondrasova, his mother, Ruzena Ondrasova, and his two adult children:
Tomas Ondras and Aneta Ondrasova, are citizens of the Czech Republic and of
Roma ethnicity. They arrived in Canada in May 2009.
[2]
After failed refugee claims, the family was provided
with three-year temporary residence permits and the opportunity to file
applications for permanent residence based on humanitarian and compassionate
[H&C] grounds.
[3]
Mr. Ondras’ daughter, Aneta, has entered into a
common-law relationship. She and her partner have a son, born in January 2012.
[4]
In 2016, the applicants initiated an H&C
application. The application was refused and that decision is now before the
Court. The applicants have raised a number of issues, however, the Officer’s
best interests of the child [BIOC] analysis is determinative and the only issue
that I need address.
[5]
For the reasons that follow, the application is
granted.
II.
Standard of Review
[6]
The standard of
review to be applied where the Court is considering an H&C decision is
reasonableness (Kanthasamy v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2014
FCA 113 at para 44 [Kanthasamy FCA]). Deference
is to be accorded to the outcome reached by the Officer on the record of
evidence before him or her. If the Officer’s decision falls within a range of
possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the facts and
the law, the Court will not intervene (Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008
SCC 9 at para 47 [Dunsmuir]).
III.
Analysis
A.
Was the Officer’s BIOC Analysis Reasonable?
[7]
In considering the H&C application, the
Officer addressed the applicants’ establishment in Canada, the best interests
of Mr. Ondras’ four year-old grandson, and the hardship the applicants would
face on return to the Czech Republic as a result of their Roma ethnicity.
[8]
In considering the best interests of the child,
the Officer noted that the identified concern was that the child would be
placed in a segregated class or school for the mentally disabled in the Czech
Republic due to his Roma ethnicity. The Officer then noted that the child is
not subject to removal from Canada and his father is a permanent resident. The
Officer concluded that: (1) the child is a Canadian citizen and would not be
required to leave Canada; (2) if the child were to leave Canada, there was
insufficient evidence to demonstrate that the child, whose father is of
Pakistani ethnicity, would be discriminated against in the education system;
and (3) it is in the child’s best interests to remain in Canada. The Officer
was persuaded that it was in the child’s best interests to reside with his
father and was not persuaded that the child could not travel to visit his
mother and the remainder of the family or maintain contact with his mother by
electronic means.
[9]
The respondent submits that the Officer’s
analysis and conclusion were reasonable. The respondent argues that the decision
reflects the limited evidence in support of the applicants’ BIOC submissions,
the Officer having considered the child’s best interests in context (Kanthasamy
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2015 SCC 61 [Kanthasamy
SCC]). I do not agree.
[10]
The BIOC evidence was admittedly limited, however,
the Officer’s analysis failed to fully consider the limited evidence. The
Officer concluded that it may be in the child’s best interests to reside in
Canada with his father “…while his mother is required
to leave Canada and apply for permanent residence.” In reaching this
conclusion, the Officer does not address evidence indicating the mother is the
child’s primary caregiver. Similarly, the Officer does not address the father’s
employment circumstances and the impact they may have on his ability to take care
of the child on a full-time basis. The record indicates that the father is a
full-time employee at a fast food restaurant and has been employed in that role
since 2013. The analysis also fails to address the impact upon a four year-old child
of his extended family being removed. Finally, in referring to the mother being
required to leave Canada, the decision suggests that the BIOC analysis was
undertaken on the basis that the mother and family would be removed.
[11]
The Officer’s BIOC analysis was unquestionably impeded
by the paucity of evidence. However, within the framework of the evidence
provided, the Officer was required to identify and define the child’s best
interests and examine those interests “with a great
deal of attention” in light of all the evidence (Kanthasamy SCC
at para 39). That did not occur here. Instead, the analysis minimalized the
child’s best interests by starting from the position that the mother would be
removed. The presumption of removal was exacerbated by a failure to fully address
the evidence that was relevant to the child’s interests.
IV.
Conclusion
[12]
A child’s best interests will not always
outweigh other considerations in an H&C application. However, it is an important
factor to be given substantial weight (Baker v Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration) [1999] 2 S.C.R. 817 at para 75). Having concluded that the
Officer’s BIOC analysis was unreasonable, I am unable to conclude that the
outcome of the H&C application would not have been different.
[13]
In oral submissions, the parties advised that
the applicants’ H&C application had been considered under the terms of an
arrangement between the parties. The parties agreed that should the matter be
returned for redetermination, that redetermination should be carried out by the
unit established under the terms of that arrangement if that unit remains in
place.
[14]
The applicants also requested that the Court
order any redetermination be completed within a prescribed time in recognition
of the fact that the applicants’ temporary residence permits will expire in
November 2017. The respondent was not opposed to the Court requiring that the
redetermination take place on an expedited basis but was opposed to the Court
imposing a defined time period for completion of the redetermination.
[15]
In the circumstances, the matter will be
returned for redetermination by a different Officer within the unit set out in
the arrangement between the parties, should that unit remain in operation. The
redetermination shall be conducted by the respondent in an expedited manner
mindful of the spirit and intent of the arrangement and prior to the expiration
of the applicants’ temporary residence permits.
[16]
The parties did not identify a question of
general importance and none arises.