Posts Tagged ‘Peter Krochak’

Victims Duped by Immigration Fraudster

Tuesday, May 4th, 2010
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The law firm of Abrams & Krochak, Canadian Immigration Lawyers, is licensed by the Law Society of Upper Canada (province of Ontario) to provide legal services for persons wishing to immigrate to Canada. Please be aware that there are some immigration consultants that claim to be a legitimate provider of such legal services, but who are not licensed by the Canadian Society of Immigration Consultants (CSIC).

To our Friends and our Fans, please do not be taken advantage of by unlicensed consultants. Begin your legal Canadian immigration today by completing our Free Eligibility Online Assessment at

http://www.akcanada.com/assessment.cfm

Victims Duped by Immigration Fraudster

An uncertified immigration consultant in Windsor has been charged with fraud after 11 clients allegedly paid him thousands of dollars for services they never received.

The victims made payments to the consultant ranging from $2,000 to $100,000 in the belief that applications to immigrate to Canada were being made on their behalf.

But no such applications were ever submitted, said investigators with the
Immigration and Passport Section of the Windsor RCMP.

Eleven counts of fraud have been laid against Francesco Salvatore Sam Burgio, 45, of Amherstburg, Ontario.

Police identified 11 victims, but believe there may be others.

Often, individuals who have been victimized are reluctant to come forward fearing that reporting their situation will interfere with their ability to gain legal immigration status in Canada, Cpl. Rod Rudiak of the Windsor RCMP said in a press release.

The Canadian Society of Immigration Consultants (CSIC) had revoked Burgios license back in 2006.

That should have set off red flags for anybody who was considering hiring him, CSIC Chair and Acting CEO John Ryan said in a release.

Most people would never consider hiring an unlicenced doctor or lawyer, and consumers need to realize that hiring an uncertified immigration consultant is just as unwise, he said.

In reaction to the arrest, Citizenship and Immigration Canada (CIC) Minister Jason Kenney said Tuesday that unscrupulous immigration consultants heap misery upon their victims and pose a serious threat to the reputation of Canada’s immigration system.

The charges against Burgio come just weeks after Vancouver-based consultant Fereydoun Hadad was sentenced to a year in prison after pleading guilty in January to defrauding an Iranian man seeking to immigrate to Canada of over $49,000.

Hadad had convinced the would-be immigrant to set up a bank account in Canada and deposit money in it. By forging the mans signature, Hadad withdrew the funds for his personal use.

Unscrupulous consultants are a significant problem and tackling it requires all levels of government to work together and make it a priority, Kenney said a statement after Hadads conviction.

Preying on people who are desperate to have a new start in Canada, or who are trying to bring their family members here, is unconscionable. As the Speech from the Throne promised, we will be taking steps to address this, Kenney added.

Ryan welcomes a government crackdown on fraudulent immigration consultants, saying legal loopholes permitted the practice to go on for too long with little danger of legal repercussions.

Only members licenced with the CSIC, a provincial or territorial bar, or Quebec notaries may advise or represent clients before the Government of Canada for a fee. However, friends, family, or religious organizations may offer free help.

The CIC website states that the government will not deal with any unauthorized person charging a fee for immigration services. To assist prospective immigrants, the website provides detailed information about e-mail and Internet scams, fake websites, and computer viruses.

Dont be a victim of a scam. If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is, the CIC warns.

Don't be a victim of Fraud

Don't be a victim of Fraud

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Dollar continues to hover near par

Wednesday, April 7th, 2010
canada dollar

canada dollar

The Canadian dollar continued to straddle parity with the U.S. currency Wednesday.

Shortly after 10 am E.T., the loonie was trading at 99.97 cents U.S., up .09 of a cent from Tuesday’s close.

It rose as high as 100.03 cents US earlier Wednesday, a day after it moved above parity with the greenback for the first time since July 2008.

The dollar’s move up came the same day a global forecasting group called for Canada’s economy to grow more than others in the G7 over the first six months of this year.

The Paris-based Organization for Economic Development and Co-operation is forecasting that Canada’s economy grew 6.2 per cent in the first quarter, well ahead of the 1.9 per cent overall growth for the G7 nations.

It predicted second-quarter growth will be about 4.5 per cent, nearly double the 2.3 per cent growth expected by the combined G7.

The organization says that growth in leading rich economies will slow in the first half of this year, with the United States and Japan outpacing sluggish Europe.

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Visible minority population on the rise

Tuesday, March 30th, 2010
30% of Canadians will be minorities

minority photo

A new report from Statistics Canada indicates that Canada’s visible minority population will soon be the majority in some cities.

The report shows that in 20 years, about 30% of Canadians will be visible minorities and in Toronto and Vancouver, about two thirds of the population will be non-white.

StatsCan says Calgary’s visible minority population is expected to be 38 % in 20 years from now.

U of C Demographer, Kevin McQuillan says a vast majority of the visible minority population has decided to live in Canada’s big cities.

“That’s where most of the economic opportunity is, so people thinking in terms of coming to the country and finding jobs, it’s not like a century ago when you thought of buying farmland and starting up in farming, I think people are now looking to the cities for jobs,” said McQuillan

According to the report, StatsCan expects the following trends in the growth of Canada’s visible minority population by 2031:

  • The South Asian population — which includes people from India, Pakistan and Sri Lanka will grow to between 3.2 and 4.1 million, up from 1.6 million in 2006
  • The Chinese population is expected to grow to between 2.4 million and 3.0 million, up from 1.3 million
  • The West Asian population will likely number some 457,000 to 592,000 people, up from 164,000 in 2006
  • The Arab population will triple, or even quadruple, to between 806,000 and 1.1 million, up from 276,000 in 2006
  • The Black population is likely to double, growing to between 1.6 million and 2.0 million, up from 815,000 in 2006
  • The Filipino population is also likely to double, growing to between 908,000 and 1.1 million, up from 427,000 in 2006


South Asians are currently the largest visible minority group in Canada and that will still be the case twenty years from now.

Downtown to become a fortress for G20 summit

Friday, March 12th, 2010

G20 Summit_Fortress of people

In four months, Steve Bovair’s downtown neighbourhood will be transformed from cosmopolitan high life to a barricaded no-man’s land.

On a normal day, the network engineer can look outside his 17th-floor window to find a typical urban scene. Cars drift through his intersection at Lower Simcoe St. and Bremner Blvd. Customers dash into take-out restaurants and convenience stores at the base of his building. Construction workers pound away at the beginnings of a new condo tower across the road.

But on June 26, the scene outside his window will resemble an urban combat zone: razor-wire fences lining the streets, helicopters clattering overhead and  potentially, at least  throngs of screaming protestors confronting police officers in riot gear. Bovair lives kitty-corner from the Metro Toronto Convention Centre, picked as the site for the upcoming G20 summit, and for two days in June, a swirling mob of foreign delegates, journalists, security personnel and  potentially, at least  stick-wielding protestors will take over downtown Toronto, literally landing on his doorstep.

Needless to say, Bovair won’t be sticking around.

“We’ve actually made the decision to go away that weekend,” said Bovair, who plans to escape with his wife to their summer home near Collingwood. “The easiest thing is to go away … and then come back when all the commotion’s over.”

Protests and fears of terrorism have become part and parcel of high-profile international meetings like the G20 summit, and Ottawa is funding an RCMP-led task force called the Integrated Security Unit to oversee security for the G20 and the G8 summit, which will take place in Huntsville. Collectively, the two meetings have been pegged the biggest security event to occur on Canadian soil.

“With the G8 and G20 held on the same weekend; it’s never happened before anywhere globally,” said Michele Paradis, RCMP spokesperson for the ISU, which also includes the Canadian Forces and officers from Toronto, Peel and the OPP.

Security officials have assured Torontonians the convention centre will create a smaller “security footprint” than bigger and more isolated venues like Exhibition Place, which was floated as a possible location. But even though the ISU says it will strive to maintain a “business as usual” atmosphere for downtown Torontonians, barricades are likely to be necessary and several security zones will be established around the downtown core.

Security perimeters are still being mapped out, but the Waterfront Business Improvement Area says police have told them zones could stretch as far north as Queen St. and as far east and west as Yonge St. and Spadina Ave.

Councillor Adam Vaughan, whose ward contains the G20 site, says he wouldn’t be surprised to see the security blanket reach as far south as the Gardiner Expressway.

“The space between Bremner (Blvd.) and the Gardiner … my sense is they’ll be securing all of that,” Vaughan said, adding he anticipates the club district will also face restrictions during the G20 summit.

Security officials promise to communicate details as soon as possible, but many residents and business owners are anxious for information.

“We would like to know as soon as possible so we can make plans,” said Elizabeth, owner of Chunky Fries, a food truck that parks in front of the convention centre. She declined to give her last name.

“We don’t really know (anything) yet. The city hasn’t notified us,” she said. “I anticipate we’ll be asked to move for security reasons.”

But when Pittsburgh hosted the G20 last year, the U.S. Secret Service didn’t announce its security boundaries until two weeks prior to the summit. Two visible security perimeters were ultimately constructed around Pittsburgh’s conference site, which is in the city’s central business district and backs onto the Allegheny River.

In Pittsburgh, the immediate area around the conference site was transformed into a pedestrian-only zone, accessible via two checkpoints, and an outer zone was blocked off to cars. Residents living within the perimeter had to undergo background checks, show ID and pass through metal detectors.

The blocked-off perimeter ultimately spanned an area measuring just over three-quarters of a kilometre by one-quarter of a kilometre; extrapolating to Toronto, this could mean a boundary area that stretches from Spadina Ave. to York St., and from the Gardiner Expressway to Wellington or King Sts.

But in Toronto, G20 organizers will also have to contend with a much more dynamic and complex neighbourhood than Pittsburgh. Complications seemingly loom in every direction:

To the west is the Rogers Centre, which may fill with more than 40,000 fans if former Blue Jay Roy Halladay comes back to Toronto to pitch against his old team for the first time. Paradis says it’s up to the team whether they will reschedule; Blue Jays spokesperson Mal Romanin says he still has to confer with G20 officials but for now, the game is “full steam ahead.”

To the east is Union Station, that frenetic transportation hub that funnels thousands of travelers every day to their TTC, GO Transit and VIA Rail destinations. The ISU isn’t planning to shut down the station or cancel routes at this point.

Overhead, planes fly to and from the island airport. The ISU says they have no plans yet to shut down the airport, although Toronto Port Authority officials say general aviation will probably be “severely restricted.”

Underneath lies one branch of the PATH system, a web of interconnected corridors that links more than 50 buildings and office towers. The ISU says the PATH probably will face “restrictions.”

And just south of the convention centre are the former railway lands, now one of the fastest-growing residential areas in the city. In Pittsburgh, the ward that included the conference site had only about 2,700 residents during the last census, in 2000; in Toronto, the railway lands alone contain some 8,000 residential units, according to Vaughan.

“The federal government appears to have paid absolutely no concern to the concerns of the community,” said area resident Mike Brock, who lives a few blocks from the convention centre. “I have a 14-month-old daughter. You worry about having to leave and go through crowds and tear gas being thrown. … It just seems like it was a very poorly thought-out location.”

Business owner Rosa De Silva fears her clients won’t be able to access her hair salon at Wellington and John Sts. if she falls within the security perimeter. And if she finds herself at the edge of the barricades, she worries her storefront could become collateral damage in the crossfire of police and protesters.

“If that kind of thing happens, who’s going to pay?” she asks. “The government has to help.”

For business owners in Pittsburgh, violence wasn’t a problem, but many shuttered for the G20 summit. The ones that stayed open saw their bottom line take a giant hit.

“It was extremely painful,” recalls Pittsburgh restaurateur Robin Fernandez, who owns a tapas restaurant that fell within the security perimeter. He said Pittsburgh became a “ghost town” during last year’s G20 summit and his restaurant, Bossa Nova, lost between $30,000 and $40,000 in revenue.

“It was very costly for us, to the point where we’re still trying to recover,” he said. “I really do not know what benefits we will ever reap from hosting that event.”

In Toronto, members of the Waterfront BIA wish they had been consulted when the federal government chose their neighbourhood to host the summit. The BIA has committed hundreds of thousands of dollars to hosting the Redpath Toronto Waterfront Festival on June 30, bringing in 12 tall ships from around the world to dock on the central waterfront.

But with the G20 wrapping up just three days prior, a slew of unanticipated problems has cropped up: What if everyone skips town to avoid the summit? Will the RCMP dismantle the barricades in time? Where will ship captains and crew sleep, now that all the hotels are reserved for G20 delegates?

To make matters worse, the festival is now in direct competition with the Pride Parade, which was pushed back a week to accommodate the G20.

“We could have held our event in the fall,” says a frustrated Carol Jolly, executive director of the BIA. She was reassured June would be the best time for the festival, but “now we’ve got all these things that are kind of pushed on us.”

Resident Mike Brock feels Ottawa made a huge mistake in plunking such a disruptive and inflammatory event in his community’s backyard.

“Everyone knows that these conferences create very, very large protests,” he said. “All it takes is 10 or 20 very violent protestors to turn the area into a war zone.”

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Jason Kenney: The ‘Smiling Buddha’ and his multicultural charms

Tuesday, February 9th, 2010

A roast pig, resplendent from hoof to snout, is being paraded for auction by a phalanx of young men. Beer glasses overflow and dancers in traditional white dress twirl for several hundred guests. The church hall, alive with the clatter of plates and Slavic speech, evokes a corner of old Skopje.

It’s Saturday night and there are converts to be won. For Jason Kenney, the Conservative point-man on ethnic politics, every step on his itinerary is a journey into another world, one where communities normally obscured by the swirl of cosmopolitan life gather as a cohesive group.

Tonight it’s the Macedonians of Mississauga.

Mr. Kenney delivers his remarks and looks momentarily puzzled as he steps away from the podium. His name has been misspelled on the commemorative plaque. His smile holds steady, though. It’s a small indignity to suffer for the sake of the Conservative Party.

Ten minutes earlier, the gregarious Immigration Minister paused before stepping out of his car, lost in the haze of his own grand plan. “Where are we?” he asked the aide responsible for his dizzying schedule.

Already today he’s talked work permits with Portuguese pastry chefs. Still to come are an address to Coptic Christians, songs of praise with a swaying evangelical congregation and then plates of samosas at a Hindu temple. A light weekend by his standards, just one of the 150-odd such expeditions over the last four years.

Mr. Kenney is tending the seeds of a strategy born in Alberta more than 15 years ago, a plan to make the right-wing movement in Canada viable for the next century.

His immediate mission is that still-elusive dream: majority government. And his program has already paid dividends. In the last election, Mr. Kenney was given credit for swinging more than half a dozen seats with large concentrations of ethnic votes to the Tories. A further dozen ridings in the suburbs encircling the three big cities are close enough to fall to the Conservatives next time around, which would put them at the 155-seat majority threshold.

“Smiling Buddha,” as he’s known to some Chinese groups, is changing both the Conservative Party and the nature of Canadian politics. But it didn’t happen overnight.

Back in 1996, Stephen Harper was a Reform MP and his friend Mr. Kenney an aspiring Alberta candidate eager to push his ideas. They had long debates about the future of conservatism. Mr. Kenney argued the right had a huge demographic challenge to address. Canada’s population growth is owed almost entirely to immigrant communities, and conservatives – both Reform and PCs in those days – posed no threat to the Liberal dominance of those constituencies. The Reform Party, in fact, was often perceived as hostile to immigration.

“I strongly argued that the future of Canadian conservatism had to go through the increasingly diverse immigrant communities,” Mr. Kenney said in an interview.

His contention was that new Canadians are overwhelmingly conservative in their values. They’ve been in thrall to the Liberal Party of the Trudeau era largely because the Liberals introduced large-scale non-white immigration to Canada.

“You observe how these new Canadians live their lives. They are the personification of Margaret Thatcher’s aspirational class,” he said. “They’re all about a massive work ethic … striving to get their small business going, strong family values, respect for tradition.”

Fast forward to 2006 and the days after the Conservative election victory. Mr. Kenney was hoping to be named to cabinet. Instead, Mr. Harper called him to a meeting at an Ottawa hotel and offered him a job that few in his caucus were inclined to tackle.

“He said, ‘Remember those conversations we had a decade ago? I’d like to you to lead an effort to try to make that a reality,’ ” Mr. Kenney recalled. Historically, Canadian prime ministers have built their national coalitions in the Macdonald-Cartier model of a leader and lieutenant, one from English Canada, the other from Quebec. But with the Bloc Québécois’ dominance cancelling out Liberal and Conservative efforts in that province, the politician who can deliver the third force, those born outside Canada, may now be in the ascendancy.

Mr. Kenney, who was brought into cabinet in 2007, is humble about his task. “There’s a lot of different paths to a majority,” he says. “This is one of them.” With his jet-black hair, full-throated laugh and Nixonian five-o’clock shadow, Mr. Kenney gives the impression of a gleeful powerbroker, one who knows he’s playing an over-the-top character in a political drama. He grew up in Wilcox, Sask., population 220, where his father ran the Athol Murray College of Notre Dame, a hockey-mad Catholic school famous for producing such NHL stars as Wendel Clark, Curtis Joseph and Vincent Lecavalier. They had to invent a debate club for Mr. Kenney.

A fierce partisan and leading light of the party’s right wing, he’s often heckled as our “racist immigration minister” by left-wing immigration activists and criticized elsewhere for his unwavering support of Israel.

The 41-year-old bachelor’s seat is in Calgary, but he’s rarely home. Most weekends are spent in Toronto, Montreal or Vancouver, the three largest cities so far resistant to Conservative advances.

In each city he has two staffers dedicated to monitoring multicultural communities. His GTA office, for example, is staffed by Melissa Bhagat and Ted Opitz, both aspiring Tory candidates, who divide the dozens of multicultural communities between them and brief the minister before visits.

Over time he has evolved into a master of multicultural small talk. If the Inuit have dozens of words for snow, Mr. Kenney has just as many ways of asking “What did you first think of winter?” He delivers formal greetings in every conceivable language and carries it off with enthusiastic charm.

The visits themselves, often a symbolic paying of respects, are less significant than what they represent. The Tories are now making breakthroughs in places once beyond their reach, from B.C.’s Lower Mainland to Toronto’s suburbs.

At the Taiwanese gala, Mr. Kenney monopolized the photo-ops while Liberal MPs looked on from the sidelines. Five years ago, the Conservatives wouldn’t even have been invited to this event, Mr. Kenney’s aide crowed.

The Macedonian event, despite the plaque mishap, also went well. The Conservatives are very popular among Macedonians, ever since the government ceased referring to their homeland as the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, an aide explains. With the Chinese it was the apology and redress for the head tax. On such gestures are alliances built.

Last fall, the Conservatives passed the Liberals in support among the one-fifth of Canadian voters born outside Canada, according to EKOS polling. They’ve since slipped four points back again, but that it’s even this close bodes ill for the Liberal Party. The Liberals are only now starting to respond to the threat posed by Mr. Kenney’s strategy, criticizing his approach as “utilitarian” and “transactional.”

“In the short term, yes, he has been effective at buying off certain groups,” said Justin Trudeau, the Liberal MP tasked with carrying his party’s message, and his father’s legacy, on multiculturalism. “There’s obviously a concern that in the past the Liberal Party has taken some of its minority communities for granted. That’s going to stop, definitely. It has stopped. But, more than that, we can actually propose a larger, more responsible view of where the country should be going, rather than just simply trying to buy off votes one group at a time.”

Normally parties avoid talking publicly about strategy, but reaching out to ethnics is a strategy the Conservatives are keen to trumpet. Mr. Kenney says his initiative has strong historical roots.

“Before Trudeau supposedly invented multiculturalism and the language of diversity in politics, Diefenbaker and the Conservatives were ahead of him,” he said, citing John Diefenbaker as the first prime minister who was neither English nor French, and Senator Paul Yuzyk, credited with popularizing the term multiculturalism in the 1960s.

“But something happened in the 1970s. You had these two awkward white guys, [Robert] Stanfield and [Joe] Clark, who, for all their best intentions, didn’t know how to communicate with Canadians, while Trudeau was out there masterfully monopolizing the symbolic politics of the language of diversity.

“From the late 1960s through to just recently, the Liberals were basically given free ice to skate on in terms of organizing, cultivating publishers and editors of ethnic media outlets … and doing the care and feeding of opinion leaders.”

There is, however, a contradiction in Mr. Kenney’s thinking. At cultural events he calls upon immigrants to guard against the entrenchment of ethnic silos or “parallel communities.” His model, Mr. Diefenbaker, was the champion of unhyphenated Canadians, yet Mr. Kenney focuses on groups constituted largely on the basis of ethno-religious difference.

Myer Siemiatycki, professor of politics at Ryerson University, argues the party is “unduly ethnicizing politics in Canada.” The Conservatives sent New Year greetings to people with Jewish names in certain ridings and did the same for people with Chinese names at Chinese New Year. Their appeals are at once principled – the Prime Minister’s trips to China and India, the apology for turning away Sikhs on the Komagata Maru, a new foreign policy on Israel – and patronizing, he said.

“It’s a debasement, in a way, of our shared citizenship to appeal to particular groups so narrowly, in such a shallow way, just on the basis of identity,” Prof. Siemiatycki said.

Mr. Kenney doesn’t see it that way, of course. He sees that ethnic communities have effective ways of mobilizing people, and that his efforts are expanding the Tory base. Fifteen years since he and Mr. Harper plotted the future in Alberta, Mr. Kenney can see the dream taking shape.

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