AZADPAKISTAN2009
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Indian company in US/CANADA
Hires from India , and collects money in Dollars , pays in rupees
Local workers don't normally get hired
Case Study : When Canada open doors to temp workers
Living in India is cheap (1 lakh rupeee/month may be high in india) , North America average house costs 500,000 USD so mortgage payment is high
Dozens of employees at Canada’s largest bank are losing their jobs to temporary foreign workers, who are in Canada to take over the work of their department.
"They are being brought in from India, and I am wondering how they got work visas," said Dave Moreau, one of the employees affected by the move. "The new people are in our offices and we are training them to do our jobs. That adds insult to injury."
Minister responds
As a result of Go Public’s inquiries, the office of the minister of Human Resources and Skills Development Canada — the federal office that approved iGATE’s plans to bring in foreign workers — issued a statement late Saturday.
"We have recently learned of allegations that RBC could be replacing Canadian workers by contracting with iGate, which is filling some of the roles with temporary foreign workers. If true, this situation is unacceptable.
"The purpose of the Temporary Foreign Worker Program is to fill acute labour needs when Canadians are not available for the work required. It was never intended as a means to bring in temporary foreign workers in order to replace already-employed Canadian workers.
"I have instructed my department to work with Citizenship and Immigration Canada to determine the next steps."
Moreau, who works in IT systems support, said he is one of 50 employees who facilitate various transactions for RBC Investor Services in Toronto, which serves the bank’s biggest and wealthiest institutional clients
News 2 More collaboration
Royal Bank of Canada personnel were in “shock" and "disbelief” when they were informed at a meeting in February that they would be replaced by outsourced workers, an RBC employee says.
Speaking to CTVNews.ca on condition of anonymity, the employee said she was stunned when she and her colleagues were told that they would be given a 90-day working notification, and that they had to start training the incoming foreign workers – their replacements.
“We had to now train them to do our jobs,” the employee said.
Read more: RBC employee asked to train replacement before layoff | CTV News
Indian company in US/CANADA
Hires from India , and collects money in Dollars , pays in rupees
Local workers don't normally get hired
Case Study : When Canada open doors to temp workers
Living in India is cheap (1 lakh rupeee/month may be high in india) , North America average house costs 500,000 USD so mortgage payment is high
Dozens of employees at Canada’s largest bank are losing their jobs to temporary foreign workers, who are in Canada to take over the work of their department.
"They are being brought in from India, and I am wondering how they got work visas," said Dave Moreau, one of the employees affected by the move. "The new people are in our offices and we are training them to do our jobs. That adds insult to injury."
Minister responds
As a result of Go Public’s inquiries, the office of the minister of Human Resources and Skills Development Canada — the federal office that approved iGATE’s plans to bring in foreign workers — issued a statement late Saturday.
"We have recently learned of allegations that RBC could be replacing Canadian workers by contracting with iGate, which is filling some of the roles with temporary foreign workers. If true, this situation is unacceptable.
"The purpose of the Temporary Foreign Worker Program is to fill acute labour needs when Canadians are not available for the work required. It was never intended as a means to bring in temporary foreign workers in order to replace already-employed Canadian workers.
"I have instructed my department to work with Citizenship and Immigration Canada to determine the next steps."
Moreau, who works in IT systems support, said he is one of 50 employees who facilitate various transactions for RBC Investor Services in Toronto, which serves the bank’s biggest and wealthiest institutional clients
News 2 More collaboration
Royal Bank of Canada personnel were in “shock" and "disbelief” when they were informed at a meeting in February that they would be replaced by outsourced workers, an RBC employee says.
Speaking to CTVNews.ca on condition of anonymity, the employee said she was stunned when she and her colleagues were told that they would be given a 90-day working notification, and that they had to start training the incoming foreign workers – their replacements.
“We had to now train them to do our jobs,” the employee said.
Read more: RBC employee asked to train replacement before layoff | CTV News