Feb 25

I began my career at Maytree over ten years ago as I was completing my graduate studies. My professor at the time recommended me to assist in a research project led by Maytree. The rest is history! I continue to gain tremendous professional experience at Maytree by working on various projects using my research, communications and event management skills.

I decided that it was time for me to support an individual just like my professor did. Given my work and personal interests, I wanted to see how I might be able to help a newcomer to Canada. Skilled immigrants have the education, experience, and language skills needed to succeed in the Canadian labour market. But what I can help them with is to get insights into the local industry and access to professional networks.

I’m doing this through TRIEC’s The Mentoring Partnership. A few months after registering, I was matched with a newly arrived immigrant in the public relations/communications field. I was very excited!

And so began my new adventure

My coach, from a local immigrant serving agency, gave me an orientation that outlined my role and provided a guide to activities that my mentee and I could work on together. These ideas included reviewing a resume, cover letter, conducting a mock-interview and suggesting industry events she could attend. Later, after determining her career goals, I could introduce her to my network and invite her to “job shadow” me at Maytree to see what my typical day looks like.

I’m looking forward to that.

Our first meeting!

As you can imagine I was nervous yet excited to meet my mentee. I was curious about what she expected from me, in terms of support.

We had a fantastic introductory meeting!

We shared our professional backgrounds and experiences. By the end of our first meeting, I think I had learned more than she did.

For example, I learned how selecting speakers for Chinese special events are conducted. This made me rethink some of my decision-making when it comes to developing an event. In turn, I shared some of the thinking that goes into selecting a venue for our major conference. We decided that at our next meeting we would review her resume and cover letter.

I’m very happy I can support her through this journey. I consider my mentee a very brave individual. There are many challenges and experiences she will be navigating through as a newcomer to Canada. I hope that I will play a small, but effective role in her successful journey to becoming a successful Canadian professional!

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Feb 04

Valeisha Sobhee, Coordinator of Programs, National Mentoring Initiative, ALLIES

Mentoring is more than just matchmaking. It’s a deliberate way to open up new networks for skilled immigrants in their fields of expertise. It is a process that starts with the right occupation-specific match, builds a relationship over time, and can lead to gainful employment.

Growing out of the success of TRIEC’s Mentoring Partnership, the ALLIES National Mentoring Initiative is working with communities across Canada to build, implement and ramp up skilled immigrant mentoring projects.

Our City Partners

Currently, nine cities in our network across Canda have mentoring programs for newcomers:

What we bring to our city partners are, among other things, a mentoring model, a workable approach, technical support, as well as connections to our national employer partners. Along with our important partner work and consultation with local communities, we have built a replication model for leaders interested in bringing mentoring to their city.

Our partners have connections with local employers (which can lead to national connections & relationships in other partner cities), immigrants, immigrant-serving agencies and municipal leadership, which are key to the success of these initiatives.

Our Employer Partners

No immigrant employment solution, such as mentoring, would succeed without visionary employers.

Employers that partner with us to provide mentors to the program across Canada realize that mentoring fosters new leadership skills in their staff, provides exposure to the realities of immigrant talent and offers the possibility to tap into a new talent pool.

Our national employer partners across the country are actively working on solutions to employ skilled immigrants. They have also identified senior local leaders in their organizations to drive local solutions and to create, develop and participate in local immigrant employment councils.

Watch Rob Brouwer, Canadian Managing Partner, Markets at KPMG, comment about skilled immigrant talent at KPMG.

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Interested in exploring a mentoring program in your company? In your city?

Let us help you. You can start now by:

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Jan 20

In the United States, January is National Mentoring Month. While this hasn’t officially caught on in Canada, we think it is a great opportunity to talk about mentoring skilled immigrants.

The Toronto Region Immigrant Employment Council (TRIEC) opened this year with a New Year’s Resolution – “If you need a resolution to inspire and motivate you, consider becoming a mentor with The Mentoring Partnership.”

We agree and we’ll spend the next couple of weeks highlighting the importance and effectiveness of mentoring skilled immigrants, and why you want to be a part of it. We’ll share some stories about mentoring, give you a sense of what’s happening across the country, spotlight some innovative employers who are leading the way, including three municipalities, and help you find your place as a mentor.

Does mentoring work? Is it successful?

We think so.

Recently, TRIEC’s Mentoring Partnership recognized 27 employers for their support. Since 2004 over 5,300 skilled immigrants have been mentored by Toronto professionals; most by staff of corporate partners. Read their stories.

Is it a rewarding experience?

On Twitter, Julia Deans, CEO of Greater Toronto CivicAction Alliance, says yes.

Watch the video below to get a sense of what it means to be a mentor.

Stay with us for the next couple of weeks and we’ll show you the power of mentoring.

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Jan 14

We follow a lot of sources and send out links to many articles every day. But we know that your time is limited and you may not be able to follow them all. At the end of each week, we pull out some themes from the week’s headlines that are worth your time. If you’re interested in our daily news coverage (and more), follow us on Twitter.

Immigration Across Canada

As we covered last week, most immigrant settlement funding cuts are happening in Ontario ($43 out of $53 million), and there has been increased coverage of immigration trends across the country: It’s working (in Winnipeg), International migrants flocking to Alberta, Webinar Jan 21: Land of Opportunity? Why Immigrants Fare Better in Atlantic Canada – PDF.

Diversity, Accomodation and Fitting In

Diversity in Canada seems to have received quite a lot of coverage this week. We’ll start by plugging the upcoming Cities of Migration webinar, Ballot Box to the Podium, focused in part on DiverseCity School4Civics, a Maytree project. Two posts in the DiverseCity blog add to this conversation: (1) Meet Louroz Mercader: “When we see ourselves in our elected officials it tells us that we are understood and that our issues matter”, and (2) GTA leaders on “multiculturalism”.

This week also saw a great focus on strategic workplace and business diversity, which, in general is well received and strongly supported (see our previous series about DiverseCity onBoard). Stories worth reading include: Emerging entrepreneurs in the news, Diversity at work. Your work, Workplace Diversity and Inclusiveness Forum: Translating Diversity into Business Advantage, ‘Vive la difference!’ Seeing foreigners as foreign encourages local coworkers to assist them (Release, Report (PDF), Ethnic diversity a ‘game changer’ for Ontario growers. And, if you’re in Toronto, this event might be of interest: Multicultural Mega Networking.

In terms of cultural or community diversity, well, it’s been a bit of a mixed week. Let’s start with the positive, welcoming angle: Saudi students happy to call the Sault home, Sikhs have come a long way since Abbotsford temple 100 years ago, Ethnic diversity thrives in Drayton Valley. The mix of smaller centres in these stories is both heartening and worth watching.

This week, the Safe Harbour project launched its Life Saving “Respect For All” Public Service Announcements (PSAs). These PSAs focus on various forms of discrimination and ask listeners: “What would YOU do if you were this witness?”

But not all stories on diversity are getting rave reviews. In particular, a planned hospice on UBC, close to some expensive condos, is being accused of lacking cultural sensitivity. Reaction has been strong, and uniformly supportive of the hospice plan. And, in Canadian politics, a Tory senator questioned a Bloc, Vietnamese-born MP’s loyalty to Canada.

Employment, Integration, Success

There were quite a number of stories about newcomers and employment. With this story’s usual up and down roller coaster ride, coverage has provided an interesting mix this week.

Let’s get the bad out of the way first. The CBC reports about a group of temporary foreign workers from the Phillipines seeking $10M damages from B.C. Denny’s restaurants.  We’ll take this opportunity to provide Maytree’s previous Recommendations for the Temporary Foreign Worker Program.

In the realm of mixed news, Statistics Canada asks the question Do Highly Educated Immigrants Perform Differently in the Canadian and U.S. Labour Markets? The Globe & Mail says yes, highly educated immigrants fare better in U.S. than Canada.

The International Organization for Migration released a report entitled The Role of Migrant Care Workers in Aging Societies. According to The Star’s Carol Goar, the quick summary indicates that “no one is very good at importing caregivers.” A past Maytree Opinion piece looked at the Live-in Caregiver program in Canada – Caring but not Cared for (PDF).

The World Economic Forum released a report that analyzes projected talent shortages by 2020 and 2030 in 25 countries (including Canada), 13 industries, and nine occupational clusters: “Industries and countries worldwide will require major increases of highly educated people in their workforces to sustain economic growth.” It offers seven responses to deal with this “global talent risk.” Read the release, download the report (PDF).

On the Canadian front of integration, last week’s Internationally Educated Professionals (IEPs) conference reported a study (to be released) recommending that the Key to Newcomer Success Is To Become “More Canadian”. IEPs “are more likely to successfully integrate into the local workforce if they focus on becoming ‘more Canadian.’” Clearly, integration success is a two-way street. If you’re familiar with and have followed the saga of Tarek in TRIEC’s Finding Talent video, you’ll be interested to know that the next chapter in this series, Integrating Talent, is coming soon. Preview it now.

Looking out West once again for some good news (to some Maytree partners), there are great models of mentorship for newcomers to help them in their economic integration (i.e. finding a job) in Canada. These articles feature the Calgary Region Immigrant Employment Council (CRIEC) and the Edmonton Region Immigrant Employment Council (ERIEC): Program looks at connecting skilled immigrants with appropriate jobs, Building innovation, Initiative matches mentors with job seekers, The Career Mentorship Symposium.

Of course, were newcomers given more opportunities, we may see more news from across the country with headlines like this: Immigrants could help businesses succeed (in Quebec).  Read the complete release and report (en français).

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Dec 27

Intentionality, instruments, and investment must be present if integration is to succeed.

In the successful integration of immigrants, there are three necessary conditions: intentionality, instruments, and investment.

Intentionality

Every country has a choice about how it views immigration; it can view it as a liability or as an asset. If immigration is viewed as a liability, tight rules will be established to limit its impact, which will be presumed to be more bad than good. Such rules will limit immigrants to working in certain sectors or types of jobs and to living in certain places, restrict the amount of time they spend in the country, and even tie them to a single employer or organization. Thus we see temporary foreign worker programs that presume we can have only certain immigrants for defined periods of time before we send them home. A temporary foreign worker program tells immigrants that their labour will be exploited, but that they are not wanted as citizens of the country. Despite the fact that such programs don’t work, they seem increasingly popular, and in Canada the federal government has implemented a temporary foreign worker program in recent years, against all advice to the contrary.

If, on the other hand, a country sees immigration as an asset, it will do what it can to maximize the value of that asset. It will design a selection system that complements the labour market, filling jobs for today’s economy and, more importantly, creating human capital for the emerging economy of tomorrow. It will permit immigrants to enter the fields of work in which they have training and experience, rather than requiring that they qualify under the strictures of domestic certification and credentials; the proper test should be of competence rather than credentials. It will help immigrants settle in neighbourhoods with good housing and transit service and access to good schools and community amenities. It will encourage participation in the life of the community, including in the political processes, whether by joining the board of a local library or community centre or by running for election to a city, state, or national legislature. The country that is successful in integration will not leave everything to chance, but will intentionally facilitate the key elements of successful settlement and integration: finding immigrants the right job, for which they have training and experience; settling smoothly into good neighbourhoods; and participating in the regular life of the community, not in an immigrant ghetto but in a neighbourhood typical of that city or town.

So the question of intentionality is: will we give them shackles, or will we give them wings? We can choose how we treat immigrants.

Instruments

Good intentions often founder on a failure to put them into operation. Successful public policy often depends on designing the right instruments or tools, which can be difficult. A good instrument takes into account the broad context in which the policy operates, and also the various interests in play. It can be impossible to satisfy every interest, and a gridlock ensues that can only be resolved by good design or leadership. The design of effective instruments is critical.

In Canada, we are developing a set of local immigrant employment councils, modelled on the Toronto Region Immigrant Employment Council, or TRIEC. These councils have two main programs: a mentoring partnership that pairs an immigrant with a Canadian in the same line of work, so the Canadian can both coach the immigrant on job searching and job culture, and introduce the immigrant to his or her own network of contacts, which are so crucial in finding a job; and a training program for employers to help them develop human resource management skills for hiring immigrants effectively. These instruments work because they ultimately serve the interests of all the parties.

We have developed instruments for increasing the diversity of people in governance roles, both in formally elected office and on the governing bodies of agencies, boards, and commissions.DiverseCity onBoard is a program that maintains a roster of diverse candidates who we have qualified by interest, experience, and capability. Through a matching process, we can help organizations find the right candidate for their board. And we have developed School4Civics, which trains people who want to run for office or run an election campaign. In the last municipal elections in the Toronto region, 12 School4Civics graduates ran for office and dozens more volunteered on campaigns.

Another Toronto-based program works with foreign-born authors to help them develop their craft and find a market in Canada. Diaspora Dialogues is in its seventh year and has a roster of established Canadian authors to mentor immigrant authors. The purpose is two-fold: to help immigrant authors establish themselves in Toronto, and to reflect to Canadian readers the diverse face of Canada, a diversity of culture and point of view.

Enabling immigrants to settle in neighbourhoods is made easier by creating access to mortgages, for which most immigrants don’t qualify because they lack a domestic credit history. One of Canada’s most successful companies, Home Trust, offers mortgages to home buyers who don’t qualify for traditional mortgages because they have insufficient other assets to meet the coverage required by lenders. Home Trust makes sure the value of the home exceeds the value of the mortgage by doing a careful assessment of the property. The mortgage business has proven to be a profitable enterprise when conducted with proper discipline, and immigrants create a whole new market. A government – municipal or state – could work with such careful lenders to provide a set of mortgage products that would enable immigrants to purchase homes.

In Chicago, the Chicago Federal Reserve has created financial instruments to help conservative Muslims with home ownership and small business investment while still observing sharia law restrictions on borrowing money. The reserve has identified three types of Islamic loans, each existing somewhere between rental and ownership. The first option is essentially a staged transfer of ownership, the second a lease-purchase, and the third a more classical shared equity loan of the type common for affordable housing in the U.K. Without such instruments, Muslims who want to buy a home have to save hundreds of thousands of dollars to purchase it outright, get loans from family and friends, or put aside their religious beliefs and take out a conventional mortgage.

Investment

Without investment, good intentions and well designed instruments won’t work. Whether a government or society is willing to put money on the line is a critical test of whether they want immigration to work.

It is not a question only of money but often of a more precious kind of capital: political capital. In most countries there are those in the political spectrum only too willing to demonize “the other,” to raise fears of the threat of people from different countries, cultures, and religions. Such fear can create a powerful political tide, sweeping up all before it. In Toronto, we saw it in the recent election of a mayor who spoke against immigration. And Canada’s federal government has proven xenophobic when incidents like the recent arrival of a boatload of economic migrants from Asia occur.

There are not enough leaders prepared to make the case for immigration and to infuse their country with intentionality and instruments backed by the needed investment. Most of us know the arguments for immigration: economic prosperity, cultural diversity, new ideas and perspectives, and fresh energy. We also know the importance of getting integration right, of making it happen in a short time-frame and with as little human cost as possible. There is no sense in making it hard, because it becomes hard for everyone.

And we know that immigration is an investment that will pay a big return, sometimes in the first generation through the quick uptake of skilled immigrants, and certainly in the longer term as ensuing generations become educated and engaged citizens.

But we need our leaders to articulate that message, and beyond that to create and support instruments of inclusion. One that we have been trying to get our leaders in Canada to embrace is the idea of allowing non-citizens to vote in municipal elections. The argument for this is that it is a useful instrument of inclusion, of engaging immigrants in the life of the community quickly, particularly at the level of government closest to the people through the provision of everyday services. We call the campaign I Vote Toronto, and we are gradually building support for it, but we still need some key leaders to come on board. We need them to invest some political capital.

As we look around the world, we can identify countries that engage fully with the three I’s of immigrant integration, and countries that engage with fewer than three. But all three – intentionality, instruments, and investment – must be present if integration is to succeed.

(Originally published in The Mark.)

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Oct 07

While recent immigrants to Canada are more highly educated than previous cohorts and the Canadian-born, they earn lower wages and have more difficulties entering the labour market. At a time when we are competing in a global economy, Canada has clearly not leveraged this talent into innovation and productivity.

As we saw with the release of Canada’s Vital Signs 2010 earlier this week, recent immigrants with a university education had an unemployment rate that was 4.1 times higher (13.9%) that that of Canadian-born workers with a university degree (3.4%), according to 2009 data.

There is no doubt immigrants to Canada are unemployed and underemployed. About 65% who arrived in the 1990s experienced a low-income period, and about one-fifth had chronic low incomes. In the most recent recession, immigrants were disproportionally affected.  Many of the newly unemployed were immigrants who had taken jobs in the manufacturing sector because their skills and experience were not recognized in Canada. They now find themselves even further from their original career goals.

One of the main factors that explains the gap between employment rates for recent skilled immigrants and their Canadian-born counterparts is the lack of social and professional networks that new immigrants have in their new home.

Now that the economy is hopefully improving, this means that they have no access to the hidden job market, including job openings that are not advertised. Depending on where they worked and how long they’ve been in the country, recent immigrants may also lack an understanding of the Canadian workplace culture and find it hard to have their international qualifications recognized.

However, more and more community organizations and employers offer programs to overcome these deficits. In particular, mentoring has shown itself to be a proven strategy as it connects a skilled immigrant with an established Canadian professional in the same or related occupation.

It’s not just the mentee who benefits – it’s a two-way street. Mentees benefit by the expert advice and connections that mentors provide – it is their bridge to becoming Canadian professionals. Mentor benefit by developing their leadership and coaching skills in addition to enhancing their ability to lead diverse teams.

The success of mentoring is demonstrable. In a study of The Mentoring Partnership in Toronto, you can see the difference that mentoring made to the individuals who participated:

  • Almost 80% of mentees found work;
  • There was a 67% increase in income for the mentee; and
  • 95% of all mentors said they would hire a skilled immigrant.

A mentoring program is also advantageous to the participating employers. Among other benefits, it:

  • Helps identify hidden talent by bringing employers in touch with qualified candidates;
  • Provides a learning opportunity for staff ; and
  • Recognizes volunteerism and helps gain greater visibility in the community.

Employers can be an active part of this process by providing mentors in one or more cities across Canada. Mentoring programs for newcomers exist in Halifax, Montreal, Ottawa, Toronto, London, Kitchener-Waterloo, Niagara, Calgary, Edmonton and Vancouver. Visit the ALLIES website to learn more about getting involved with mentoring.


Peter Paul is the project leader of ALLIES, a project jointly funded by Maytree and The J.W. McConnell Family Foundation. ALLIES (Assisting Local Leaders with Immigrant Employment Strategies) supports local efforts in Canadian cities to successfully adapt and implement programs that further the suitable employment of skilled immigrants.

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May 19

Mentors, mentees and corporate partners all benefit from participating in The Mentoring Partnership, an award-winning TRIEC program that brings together recent skilled immigrants and established professionals in occupation-specific mentoring relationships. More than 50 employers have come onboard in Toronto to make 1,000 matches each year. ALLIES currently supports urban centres across Canada to develop, implement and enhance mentoring programs for skilled immigrants in their communities.

Watch this just released video as mentors, mentees and corporate partners share why mentoring matters.

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Mar 25

The successful integration of immigrants is not simply a matter of individual efforts by newcomers to Toronto. It must be accompanied by the city’s will to make social cohesion a priority by engaging a range of stakeholders, and it requires action from many players. In other words, inclusion is a two way street.

In a cosmopolitan city like Toronto – where our residents speak more than 100 languages and come from 200 distinct ethnic groups – the integration of immigrants is critical. Toronto continues to be a city of choice for many newcomers to Canada with 49 per cent of our city’s population comprised of immigrants.

In light of our aging population and our declining birth rate, we’ll rely more and more on immigrants as a key resource for building and strengthening our city and country. By 2011, Canada will rely 100 per cent on immigration for our net labour market growth; by 2026, our net population growth will be derived from immigration.

Based on these imminent realities, we need to continue to effectively integrate new immigrants into our communities, especially if they choose Toronto as their home.

This is why Maytree incubates ideas and collaborates with many stakeholders on local practical solutions for immigrant integration. This is also why we are communicating and partnering with national and international organizations on solutions that work.

We know these initiatives have made a meaningful and tangible impact on Toronto. And they are gaining traction in diverse urban centres across Canada and abroad – many communities are looking to Toronto to lead by example.

A few key highlights:

Since the Toronto Region Immigrant Employment Council was launched in 2003 by Maytree and the Toronto City Summit Alliance, a range of successful projects have helped skilled immigrants integrate smoothly into the Greater Toronto Region labour market.

Now through the ALLIES project, a partnership with The J.W. McConnell Family Foundation, cities across Canada are learning from – and adapting – the TRIEC model to set up their own, locally-led, immigrant employment councils. In Vancouver, Edmonton, Winnipeg, Saskatoon, Ottawa, Montreal, Waterloo Region, Niagara, London, Fredericton, Moncton and Halifax, a strong civic movement is building to ensure immigrants can put their international skills, education and experience to good use.

Toronto’s story of immigrant integration has also garnered the interest of civic leaders and policy makers from outside of Canada, from Sweden to Singapore to Spain.

The Mentoring Partnership is another successful program founded in Toronto in 2004. It has helped over 5,000 skilled immigrants navigate the local job market with guidance from volunteer mentors in similar professions.  Eighty three percent of mentees said their mentoring relationship made a positive difference to their job search.

Over 50 corporate partners from the private and public sector have been actively engaged in the program as a means to nurture their staff’s leadership capacity and to build cross-cultural competence in an increasingly diverse workforce.

Through a recently launched national initiative, urban cities across Canada – and as far away as Auckland, New Zealand – have implemented their own mentoring programs for skilled immigrants as well.

DiverseCity, another project launched by Maytree and the Toronto City Summit Alliance, supports and develops up-and-coming leaders from under-represented ethnic and racial groups to address their low numbers in senior leadership positions in the Greater Toronto Area. Other communities across the country are interested in learning how to ensure that institutions are governed by qualified leaders who are more reflective of their population.

Cities of Migration, also a Toronto-based project, is the first international initiative to connect communities in Canada, the United States and around the globe on issues of migration and immigrant integration. With existing partners in Germany, Spain, the UK and New Zealand, the project just began a new collaboration with The National League of Cities to exchange key learnings about successful integration strategies.

While Maytree has had a hand in shaping these projects and solutions, we have not developed these ideas alone. It is only with the vision, energy and innovation of key players including employers, educators, community agencies, media, civic leaders and government, that Toronto has moved the marker on immigrant integration.

This collaborative approach is yet another reason why communities around the world are looking to Toronto for inspiration.

Indeed there is still much work to be done in Toronto, but we have made measurable and marked progress.

For that, our city should be proud.

(This post first appeared on the Toronto Star blog “Your City, My City“).

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