News

Immigrant Canadians stuck in catch -22 when ID lost

posted on August 26, 2014

By Wanda Chow, Burnaby Newsleader | Link to Article

Immigrant Canadians will want to hold onto their wallet-sized Canadian citizenship cards for dear life. Or at least keep them in a safe deposit box.

That’s because the federal government is no longer issuing the photo identification.

By Wanda Chow, Burnaby Newsleader | Link to Article

Immigrant Canadians will want to hold onto their wallet-sized Canadian citizenship cards for dear life. Or at least keep them in a safe deposit box.

That’s because the federal government is no longer issuing the photo identification.

And it’s caused no end of grief for people who have had all their ID lost or stolen.

Burnaby-New Westminster NDP MP Peter Julian says it’s all because Citizenship and Immigration Canada (CIC) switched to a photo-free, paper certificate in February 2012.

“It was done without really consulting the provinces,” said Julian. “In B.C.’s case particularly, there was a real balking of ‘this isn’t a valid identification.’”

With no photo, ICBC won’t accept it as a form of primary identification when issuing driver’s licences.

Since 2013, people without driver’s licences can get a new BC Services Card, the new, more secure version of both the Carecard and BC Identification, also without a photo or signature.

But that, in turn, is not accepted by Passport Canada when applying for a passport.

“That really started to compound the problem for somebody who’s a new Canadian,” said Julian.

The two changes have led to immigrants in British Columbia being hit harder than in other provinces.

People born in Canada are able to simply get a new birth certificate to get the ball rolling on replacing ID.

But that’s not possible for immigrants whose first step would be to get a new Canadian citizenship card.

In the past year, Julian’s constituency office staff have worked on about a half dozen such cases. Only one has been resolved and that took more than 10 months.

That’s 10 months when the person had no access to a driver’s licence or passport, preventing him from driving or travelling or applying for anything else that requires photo ID.

For the remaining cases, they’re still waiting.

“They’re not smart moves, and particularly not smart when the two levels of government are not consulting,” said Julian.

“The idea that you can simply change the ID protocol and not think of what would happen if somebody lost their existing ID, it’s inconceivable to me that they would not have worked through that scenario.”

While Julian’s office has only had a handful of cases, he said it will be a growing problem if it’s not resolved soon.

Anyone whose job, housing and other situations don’t change may be able to get by, but otherwise the lack of ID can hamper people’s efforts to find employment or a place to live, he noted.

“It starts becoming critical … Not having identification is like wearing a pair of handcuffs all day. You’re severely limited in what you can do.”

In the one successful case, Julian said it was only resolved after the federal government issued a special piece of identification to start the process of replacing ID. And that was only after numerous letters and emails in conjunction with Burnaby-Deer Lake NDP MLA Kathy Corrigan’s office to get the two levels of government to communicate with each other.

Corrigan said her office has worked on two such cases so far. The federal and provincial governments have the ability to fix the problem, but “they have not made it a priority to date and they need to do that,” she said.

“Presumably the federal government’s verification process, allowing people to become citizens, must be secure enough … you would assume it’s good enough to allow somebody to get a piece of identification in the province,” she said.

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