JAGGI LAW Office

JAGGI LAW Office A REGINA based professional Legal advisory office.

Focusing on Criminal Defense, Canadian Immigration Law, Family law, Real Estate, Corporate commercial, Wills and Estates.

03/28/2026

On March 26, 2026, Bill C-12 (the Strengthening Canada’s Immigration System and Borders Act) received Royal Assent. The passing of this bill limits access to the Immigration and Refugee Board for many people. Here are the two major changes for refugee applicants:

One-year bar

Under Bill C-12, refugee claims made more than one year after an individual’s first entry into Canada (on or after June 24, 2020) will not be referred to the Immigration and Refugee Board (IRB) for a refugee hearing, even if the individual later left Canada and re-entered. In these cases, the individual may seek protection only through a Pre-Removal Risk Assessment (PRRA), which is decided based on written submissions and has a lower chance of success.

This provision applies retroactively. As a result, if a claim has been made, but was not referred to the IRB by June 3, 2025, the claimant will not be eligible for an IRB refugee hearing.

14-day rule

Bill C-12 also introduces a bar for certain irregular entries across the Canada–United States land border. If an individual is an irregular arrival and makes a refugee claim more than 14 days after that entry, the claim will not be referred to the IRB for a hearing. In that situation, the individual may apply only for a PRRA, which is decided through a paper-based process.

Happy New Year ..! 2026
12/31/2025

Happy New Year ..! 2026

10/20/2025

Bill C-12 introduces sweeping changes to immigration law under the guise of border security

Canadian Immigration Laeyers Aaociation (CILA)

October 16, 2025

The measures proposed in the Government of Canada’s Bill C-12 undermine established immigration legal processes and expand the government’s discretionary powers.

Note: Media are welcome to contact CILA at: [email protected]

While it is true that IRPA is 25 years old and may need modernization, any changes should balance the following core values:

The rule of law
The enhancement of public safety
Efficient resource use, and
Canada’s international commitments to protect the most vulnerable.
The legislation, if passed, would cause Canada to compromise fundamental principles in a way that mirrors concerning developments in the United States.

The key issues for CILA can be summarized as follows:

Overreach of Public Safety Canada:

Key concerns:

Bill C-12 shifts core immigration functions into a national security framework, bypassing the established legislative structure.
Public Safety Canada’s statutory role pertains to national security, crime prevention, and emergency preparedness. It is not tasked with immigration program delivery or refugee protection determination. Immigrants and refugees are not inherently security threats. Programmes and policies affecting them should reflect that fact. Parliament must ensure that immigration law remains principled, fair, and accountable.

Excessively broad Governor in Council Powers (amended Sections 87.31 (1) & (2) IRPA)

Key concerns:

Extraordinary authority to cancel, vary, or suspend certain categories of documents including permanent resident visas and permanent resident cards without recourse to the principles of procedural fairness and due process that have been long established in Canada;
Untrammeled discretion to cancel, vary, or suspend certain categories of applications (permanent, temporary, travel-related) without review;
“Public interest” standard is vague and undefined;
Retroactive termination of valid applications;
Powers to cancel, suspend, or vary visas, permits, and PR cards for broad classes of people—without notice or opportunity to respond.
Section 87.31(1) and (2) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act (IRPA) currently authorizes the Governor in Council to suspend the acceptance or processing of temporary resident applications from countries or territories that unreasonably refuse to issue, or delay the issuance of, travel documents for their own nationals who are in Canada. This authority is grounded in principles of international relations allowing Canada to respond proportionally to unreasonable treatment by foreign countries towards their own citizens travelling in Canada.

In contrast, Bill C-12 would grant the Governor in Council significantly broader powers — not only to suspend or refuse applications, but also to cancel, vary, or suspend valid immigration documents issued to both temporary and permanent residents. Such powers, especially as they pertain to permanent residents, raise serious concerns. The cancellation of permanent resident documents must respect established due process rights and be assessed on a case-by-case basis. Blanket regulatory orders driven by political considerations risk undermining the rule of law and fundamental rights.

This structure undermines basic procedural fairness. CILA is particularly concerned about the permissibility of retroactive termination of applications submitted in accordance with valid statutory and regulatory criteria. The lack of fixed criteria, prescribed time limits, and independent accountability mechanisms renders these powers highly susceptible to arbitrary or politically motivated use. This approach is inconsistent with foundational principles of administrative law.

Expanded Officer Enforcement Powers (new section 32.1 IRPA)

Key concerns:

Foreign nationals must appear for examination, answer questions, and provide documents on demand.
These front-line enforcement powers have been significantly broadened. Yet there are no statutory standards, clear limits, or procedural protections.

Adverse Impact on Refugees and Asylum-Seekers

Bill C-12 needlessly denies certain asylum-seekers a refugee hearing in the name of “border security” while failing to address the actual threat to the refugee system posed by the catastrophic IRB backlog.

Key concerns:

One-Year Bar on Refugee Claims (amendment to s. 101(1) IRPA)

Refugees who do not claim within one year of first entry are denied a full IRB hearing;
Disproportionately harms those who experience sudden crises in their home countries;
Applies even to people who only visited Canada briefly years ago or as children (section 73(2))
Forces claimants into the Pre-Removal Risk Assessment (PRRA) process which has:
No guaranteed oral hearing;
No automatic stay of removal after a negative decision;
Increased risk of wrongful rejection due to fewer procedural safeguards;
Decisions by individual officers rather than IRB Members.
Claimants entering from the US (amendment to s. 101(1) IRPA)

Barred from full hearings and relegated to the inferior PRRA process (above);
Yet, the US no longer meets safe third country standards:
Widespread detention and poor conditions;
Gender-based violence not recognized as a ground for asylum;
Legally sanctioned removal to third countries without due process requirements.
Claimants from Moratorium Countries

No pathway to seek asylum or even access PRRA, since they are not PRRA eligible due to non-removability;
Left in indefinite legal limbo causing hardship due to precarious status.
Under the Bill, all these categories of claimants are singled out for less favorable treatment, despite a complete lack of evidence that such claims lack merit. In order to comply with Canada’s international obligations, there should be no discrimination between and among refugee claimants based on their mode of entry or the timing of their claim. All should have the same access to a full oral hearing before an IRB member and full appeal rights with suspensive effect on removal. If the Bill is passed, Canada’s one-year asylum bar would be much stricter than that which is currently in place in the US. Claimants who enter at land borders may have valid reasons for not wishing to claim in the US, as outlined above.

Furthermore, Canada must review the designation of the US as a safe third country before implementing these measures. If the designation is suspended, orderly entry of claimants will save time and money now spent on patrolling the border.

Systemic Impacts

Key concerns:

Shifts burdens from the IRB to IRCC and the already overwhelmed Federal Court (expected to face 24,000+ new cases for a second year);
Does nothing to address the existing IRB backlog.
Bill C-12 will put more pressures on the refugee system than it would remove. Shifting more types of claims from the IRB onto IRCC to determine the PRRAs will place a new caseload before the Federal Court. This caseload would include not just judicial review applications, but stay applications as well—since the Bill allows for removal prior to review by the Federal Court.

More crucially, the Bill does nothing to address the untenable IRB backlog of unheard refugee claims. CILA briefed the former Minister on this looming crisis in December 2024, and remains available for consultation.

CILA’s Call to Action

Bill C-12 must undergo a full study by the Standing Committee on Citizenship and Immigration.
Stakeholder consultations must be held before further action.
The backlog of refugee claims at the IRB must be immediately addressed.
Parliament must ensure immigration law remains principled, fair, and accountable, not subordinated to a national security agenda.

We are currently hiring for two casual position at our Regina office to join our team and assist us in completing some o...
08/23/2025

We are currently hiring for two casual position at our Regina office to join our team and assist us in completing some organizational projects. Start and end dates are negotiable.

Boxing and sorting files, and physically moving them from one location to another. Disposing of files based on end date; assessing them for closing date, and shredding when applicable. Inventorying a location and supplying a detailed inventory list.

The successful candidate(s) can look forward to working independently on difficult tasks with clear achievable deliverables. The right candidate(s) will have a high work ethic, with strong organizational skills. Ability to maintain confidentiality is of high importance. The ability to work alone and self-manage will be key.

If you are interested send your details: [email protected]

07/28/2025

Are you looking for a lawyer who will fight for you without losing sight of what really matters? A true advocate knows that aggression alone is not enough - it's the thoughtful and strategic approach that drives real results. By working with a lawyer who is both assertive and principled, you can trust that they will guide you through even the toughest challenges with a steady hand and a clear eye on the outcome. It's time to rethink what it means to have a powerful lawyer on your side.

07/02/2025

We are looking for one to two summer students to join our team and assist us in completing some organizational projects over the course of the summer. Start and end dates are negotiable and dependent on the start and end dates of the students schooling.

Boxing and sorting files, and physically moving them from one location to another. Disposing of files based on end date; assessing them for closing date, and shredding when applicable. Inventorying a location and supplying a detailed inventory list.

The successful candidate(s) can look forward to working independently on difficult tasks with clear achievable deliverables. The right candidate(s) will have a high work ethic, with strong organizational skills. Ability to maintain confidentiality is of high importance. The ability to work alone and self-manage will be key.

If you are interested send your details: [email protected]

Important update: contact our office for your queries and questions.
02/19/2025

Important update: contact our office for your queries and questions.

10/31/2024

May this festive season bring happiness all around.

10/25/2024

Immigration has kept Canada’s economy afloat. What will coming cuts mean?

Global News October 25, 2024View on Watch
As Canada looks to cut immigration numbers in the next few years, Canadians may be wondering what those shifts to the population could mean for the risks of a recession.
Experts and federal officials over recent years have pointed to high population growth, due in large part to immigration, as a factor that has helped Canada avoid an economic downturn.

"We were of the view that the Canadian economy likely would have experienced a recession in 2023 had it not been for the decades-high population growth that we saw in 2023 (and) 2024," said Randall Bartlett, senior director of Canadian economics at Desjardins.
In January, the financial institution along with other economists had suggested a short and shallow recession was possible in the first half of the year, though as time went on that didn't come to pass.
Bartlett said Desjardins is anticipating real GDP (gross domestic product) growth of about 1.5 per cent annualized in the third quarter of 2024, and about two per cent in the fourth. The Bank of Canada itself forecasts GDP growth of 1.5 per cent in 2024 and 2.2 per cent in 2025.

On Thursday, however, the federal government announced it would reduce the number of new permanent residents by 21 per cent by next year, with further drops the following two years.
Bartlett cautions there remains uncertainty in what comes next for Canada's economy.
"What we see is that it really is a trade-off between population growth that we're expecting to see and per capita, real GDP growth," Bartlett said.
"We see more economic activity being generated in Canada, we see increased productivity in Canada over the next couple of years that could help us avoid a recession even as population growth slows considerably."
Another factor is the Bank of Canada's recent and expected future cuts to its key interest rate.
Earlier this week, the bank delivered an oversized cut bringing the rate down from 50 basis points, with its focus now on encouraging growth to make it easier for Canadians and businesses to spend and boost the economy.
Bank of Canada Gov. Tiff Macklem, in reaction to the immigration cuts, said Friday the move could have a bigger impact on its growth forecast than on the trajectory of inflation.
However, he added there was a lot of uncertainty on how quickly the cuts would be implemented.
"If population growth comes down faster than we have assumed, headline GDP growth will be lower than we assumed," Macklem said.
BMO economist Robert Kavcic said in a report on Thursday that the immigration cuts could have "wide ranging implications," including taking stress off the economy and infrastructure like housing and services.
But in an interview with Global News on Friday, he said the cuts would also give a bit more leeway to the Bank of Canada.
"It's going to allow the Bank of Canada, if anything, more room to continue cutting rates as they want to and ultimately, in per-capita terms, put us in a better, more sustainable footing for the longer term," Kavcic said.
He added that the cuts could also have an impact in the immediate future on consumer spending and construction activity, but from a "big picture," won't cause a recession.
Macklem said in his comments Friday that if household spending recovers more quickly due to continued lowering of borrowing costs by the central bank, economic growth could be higher.
Philip Oreopoulos, a distinguished professor in economics at the University of Toronto, told Global News there's more to the Bank's decisions than just population growth.
"The bank is trying to attract more money flowing in a way that might encourage more economic activity," Oreopoulos said. "I still think that that kind of action independently is a stronger move to fight the recession than the potential negative impact of reducing the number of immigrants."
Bartlett added that going forward, the Bank of Canada may need to adjust its considerations of population growth when making its interest rate decisions.
"The Bank of Canada ... is going to have to significantly scale back the pace of population growth that it's assumed that's going to have impacts for overall real GDP growth in the bank's forecast and could have impacts for inflation as well as the interest rate profile that economists are expecting," he said.
-- with files from Reuters

09/03/2024

Limits to Low-Wage LMIA Applications:
Starting September 26, 2024, certain LMIA applications submitted for the low-wage stream will be affected by various tightening measures. Firstly, certain LMIA applications for low-wage positions in areas with an unemployment rate of 6% or higher won't be processed. Secondly, the current 20% cap on the proportion of low-wage positions is being reduced to 10%. And thirdly, the maximum employment duration for low-wage positions is being reduced from 2 years to 1 year. Further updates related to these measures are expected to arrive within the coming weeks.

Visitors Can No Longer Apply for a Work Permit from Within Canada:
IRCC has ended a temporary public policy that previously allowed visitors to apply for a work permit from within Canada. There are various exceptions to the rule but in general those with visitor status in Canada are now required to submit their applications either at the port of entry or to visa posts abroad.

Extension for Work Permits for Ukranians:
Ukrainians and their family members who were approved under the Canada–Ukraine authorization for emergency travel, and who arrived in Canada on or before March 31, 2024, can now apply for an open work permit until March 31, 2025.

Work Permits for PNP Candidates:
IRCC has announced a new public policy to provide Open Work Permits for people who have a support letter from a Provincial Nominee Program that supports their candidacy in a PNP Expression of Interest pool. These work permits are only available if they include a provincial support letter. So far, Manitoba has indicated that they will provide letters for candidates in certain circumstances and we are waiting to see what other provinces will do in light of this announcement.

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