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Canada’s Healthcare Crisis: Wasting Talent While Patients Wait
02.10.2025
Part 2 of 2: Why internationally trained healthcare professionals can’t practice As Canada faces a shortage of almost 25,000 doctors, foreign trained physicians are working as cashiers at McDonald’s and […]
More Clubs, More Cities: Canoo Expands Live Soccer Offerings Across Canada
23.09.2025
The Institute for Canadian Citizenship (ICC) is proud to announce that York United FC and Halifax Tides FC have joined the Canoo app, giving newcomers another way to watch and enjoy soccer — the world’s most popular sport, with a growing global fanbase that outpaces all others. York United FC is offering Canoo members 20% off tickets, plus a 10% discount on merchandise for the 2025 campaign and similarly Halifax Tides FC is offering 25% off tickets for the current season.
Canada’s Healthcare Crisis: The Growing Gap Between Need and Supply
19.08.2025
Part 1 of 2: Understanding the Problem Canada’s healthcare system is running on fumes. Emergency rooms are closing in rural Saskatchewan. In Ontario, 2.5 million people (15% of the population) […]
Freedom, Choice, and a Life Rebuilt: Roy Ratnavel’s Canadian Story
30.07.2025
Roy Ratnavel\’s journey from a Sri Lankan prison cell to Vice Chairman on Bay Street is nothing short of extraordinary. But what defines him isn’t just success. It\’s gratitude. In this special feature, Roy opens up about the power of second chances, the responsibility to give back, and why immigrants are here to build, not take. His story is a powerful reminder that freedom, when chosen, is never taken for granted.
ICC Reacts Following the Council of the Federation Gathering
24.07.2025
TORONTO, ON — Daniel Bernhard, CEO of the Institute for Canadian Citizenship made the following statement following the conclusion of the three-day Council of the Federation gathering in Huntsville: The […]
Building Canada’s Future: Why We Can’t Afford to Turn Away Skilled Immigrant Workers
16.06.2025
Canada is grappling with its most severe housing crisis in generations, requiring an unprecedented 47% increase in construction output to meet demand. The Canadian Construction Association estimates a shortage of 85,500 workers over the next decade, yet immigrants with construction skills represented just 2.4% of new arrivals – down from 9.6% in the 1980s. As the Carney administration pursues plans to build 500,000 homes annually, the question for Canadians isn’t whether we need immigrant construction workers, but whether we can afford to turn them away.
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