Live-in caregiver says government promises for foreign worker program aren’t enough
TORONTO — With Parliament poised to look at changes to how temporary foreign workers are treated, people who came as live-in caregivers are speaking out about what they call injustices within the federal programs.
Kristina Torres, 28, came to Canada from the Philippines under a federal live-in caregiver program that she said has left her feeling “disposable” and less than human. Torres joined other caregivers in Toronto on Sunday to discuss allegations of exploitation in the program.
The federal initiative allowed families to hire someone from another country to live with them and provide care for children, seniors and people with medical needs or disabilities. After two years in the program, the caregiver could then apply to become a permanent resident.
The program was changed in 2014 so new applicants were no longer required to live in their employers’ homes. But people already employed through the live-in program could continue in that stream. Torres said those who had been in the program couldn’t apply for so-called “live-out” jobs without going through what she described as a “lengthy” re-application process.