-----Original Message-----
From: Kevin Field [mailto:
kevinjamesfield@gmail.com]
Sent: February 14, 2011 10:58 AM
To: Braid, Peter - M.P.
Subject: refugees
Dear Mr. Braid,
I wanted to write you about a town hall meeting you missed last year.
It was on the subject of the immigration reforms that were drawn up
without proper consultation by 'on the ground' workers and tragically
passed into law. I say tragically because I was against the nature of
the reforms back then and now I am seeing the results of them play out
in two different communities I and my partner are part of. In each
community, multiple families who have been here an extended period of
time building a new life and bringing life and health to our
communities have been facing deportation. One family actually got
split up, with the father having to go to one country and the mother
and children having to go to another--the dangerous region they had
fled from in the first place. Doesn't such a situation strike you as
just plain wrong, no matter what the rationale behind it? And if the
rationale is purely economic, as with so many things in the political
sphere today, I think it's quite shortsighted. If you spend money
trying to kick families out of Canada, especially families who clearly
contribute much more to everyone's quality of life here than our
average native citizen, who is taught from a young age to be primarily
a consumer, I think this will end up costing us all more in real
dollar terms in both the short run (for the resources needed to
actively exclude, and the loss of their immediate economic
contributions) and the long run (in higher health care costs due to
poorer quality of life, if nothing else). Please help put a stop to
this somehow. I do think the current system as of last year needed
reforming, but the results of the path we took are exactly what
concerned groups last year predicted they would be, and they speak for
themselves. I think if groups of people who work with refugees and
immigrants (social workers, lawyers, immigration officials, judges,
etc.) had been more widely consulted, this could have been avoided. I
hope you act quickly in the best interests of Waterloo's communities
(and Canada's communities) in getting this reversed and arguing for a
more humane process this time.
Sincerely,
Kev (uptown resident)