The Canadian Government announced New Program. Which name is Rural and Northern Immigration Pilot Program(RNIP)
Who can apply
To be eligible for the Rural and Northern Immigration Pilot Program, you must meet all IRCC eligibility requirements. You must
- have qualifying work experience or have graduated from a publicly funded post-secondary institution in the recommending community
- meet or exceed the language requirements
- meet or exceed the educational requirements
- prove you have enough money to support your transition into the community
- intend to live in the community
- meet community-specific requirements
If you meet all of the requirements, you can start to look for an eligible job in the community.
Work experience
You need 1 year of continuous work experience (at least 1,560 hours) in the past 3 years.
To calculate your hours of work experience
- count the hours worked in part-time and full-time jobs
- the hours must be in 1 occupation, but they can be with different employers
- the hours must be over a period of at least 12 months
- these working hours can be inside or outside Canada
- if you worked in Canada, you must have been allowed to work in Canada
- don’t count hours you weren’t paid for (volunteering or unpaid internships don’t count)
- don’t count hours when you were self-employed
Your work experience must include
- most of the main duties and all the essential duties listed in your National Occupational Classification (NOC)
- the activities listed in the lead statement of your NOC
You can see which duties are involved by searching your job title on the NOC web page.
International students
You’re exempt from the work experience criteria above if you’re an international student who graduated with
- A credential from a 2+ year-long post-secondary program and you
- were studying as a full-time student for the full duration of the 2+ years
- received the credential no more than 18 months before your application for permanent residence
- were in the community for at least 16 of the last 24 months spent studying to get your credential
- A master’s degree or higher and you
- were studying as a full-time student for the duration of your degree
- got your degree no more than 18 months before your application for permanent residence
- were in the community for the length of your studies
You cannot apply as an international student if your credentials are from a program in which
- studying English or French made up more than half of the program
- distance learning made up more than half of the program
- a scholarship or fellowship was awarded that requires you to return to your home country to apply what you learned
What is a credential?
Credential here means a degree, diploma, certificate or trade or apprenticeship from a Canadian publicly funded institution in the community recommending you. You must also have had valid temporary resident status for the duration of your studies.
Language requirements
You must meet the minimum language requirements based on the NOC category that applies to the job offer in the community. This can either be the
- Canadian Language Benchmarks (CLB) or
- Niveaux de compétence linguistique canadiens (NCLC)
The minimum language requirements for each NOC category are
- NOC 0 and A: CLB/NCLC 6
- NOC B: CLB/NCLC 5
- NOC C and D: CLB/NCLC 4
You must submit your results from a designated language test. These results must be less than 2 years old when you apply.
Educational requirements
You must have
- a Canadian high school diploma or
- an educational credential assessment (ECA) report, from a designated organization or professional body, showing that you completed a foreign credential that’s equal to Canadian secondary school (high school)
- the ECA report must be less than 5 years old on the date of your application
- the original ECA report must have been issued on or after the date the organization was designated
Settlement funds
Unless you’re already working legally in Canada when you apply, you must prove you have enough money to support yourself and any family members while you get settled in your community.
You must prove you have enough money to support any family members you may have, even if they’re not coming to Canada with you.
Intend to live in the community
To participate in the pilot, you must plan to live in the community.
Community-specific requirements
Each community will have additional requirements for applicants.
Visit their websites to learn about their community-specific requirements.
Community websites
The pilot will launch in participating communities at different times.
If a website is listed as “coming soon”, the pilot hasn’t launched in that community.
Community | Community website |
---|---|
North Bay, ON | Coming soon |
Sudbury, ON | Coming soon |
Timmins, ON | Coming soon |
Sault Ste. Marie, ON | www.welcometossm.com |
Thunder Bay, ON | www.gothunderbay.com |
Brandon, MB | Coming soon |
Altona/Rhineland, MB | www.seedrgpa.com |
Moose Jaw, SK | Coming soon |
Claresholm, AB | Coming soon |
Vernon, BC | Coming soon |
West Kootenay (Trail, Castlegar, Rossland, Nelson), BC | Coming soon |
About the pilot
The Rural and Northern Immigration Pilot is a community-driven program. It’s designed to spread the benefits of economic immigration to smaller communities by creating a path to permanent residence for skilled foreign workers who want to work and live in 1 of the participating communities.
About the process
There are 4 steps to applying for permanent residence under this pilot.
- Check that you meet both
- Find an eligible job with an employer in 1 of the participating communities
- Once you have a job offer, submit your application for recommendation to the community
- If a community recommends you, apply for permanent residence
Each community will also have their own
- additional eligibility requirements
- job search process
- community recommendation application process
This information will be available on their websites.
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