HUMAN RESOURCES AND MANAGEMENT  

In the news: 'It's like a cage': Foreign workers who quit Canadian Tire speak out about feeling trapped by work permits

A man in a blue shirt engages with a tablet.

Rowell Pailan spends his days applying for jobs in factories, in restaurants, in shops. He’s ready to take any kind of work.

Last September, Pailan quit his job with the company he came to Canada to work for over what he says are disputes about his treatment, including hours and wages. Now, he can’t find an employer willing to do the paperwork to change his closed work permit — a standard part of Canada’s Temporary Foreign Worker (TFW) program that ties workers to specific companies.

McMaster University professor Catherine Connelly says she was “shocked, but also not that surprised” by what the workers allege they experienced at the Etobicoke store.

WATCH | How ending closed work permit system would benefit workers: 

She says that in her view, closed work permits are one of the “worst aspects” of the TFW program because they can facilitate abuse.

“It literally does trap the worker. It ties them to the workplace,” said Connelly, who specializes in human resources and management and has spent the past 10 years studying and interviewing temporary foreign workers and their employers.

“And so people endure considerable mistreatment.”

 

Read the full article on CBC News.


Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related Stories