#16 - The History of the Immigration Consultant Profession in Canada, with Ron McKay
Podcast |
Borderlines
Media Type |
audio
Categories Via RSS |
News & Politics
Publication Date |
Jul 11, 2017
Episode Duration |
01:09:49
In this episode we discuss the history of the immigration consultant profession in Vancouver and current issues that the profession faces from a regulatory and governance perspective. Ron McKay is a past Chair of the Immigration Consultants of Canada Regulatory Council's Board of Directors. He is a former Immigration Officer who spent ten years at the Canadian Embassy in Tokyo, Japan. He is also a past National President of the Canadian Association of Professional Immigration Consultants. 3:30 – We discuss the history of immigration consultants in Canada, including an in depth discussion of the Mangat case, in which the Supreme Court of Canada determined that the federal government could allow non-lawyers to practice immigration law. We also discussed the Canadian Society of Immigration Consultants ("CSIC"), the first regulatory body of immigration consultants in Canada. 24:00 – We get into governance issues at regulatory oversight issues at both CSIC and the ICCRC. 38:30 - We talk about ghost consultants and what the immigration consultancy profession can do about it. 50:00 - We discuss how the immigration consulting profession needs to be regulated yet at the same time be independent of the government. 53:00 - Steven asks how the ICCRC determines how many consultants there should be. Are we reaching a saturation point? Should there be limits as to which aspects of immigration law they can practice?

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