Ten years ago, Canada responded to the unfolding humanitarian crisis in Syria with an unprecedented program that rapidly resettled 25,000 Syrian refugees in roughly 100 days.Â
To meet that target, the federal government accelerated every step of the process â from identifying refugees, processing visas, co-ordinating transportation and supporting their arrival and integration across the country.Â
âIt was surreal to live through,â said Chris Friesen, CEO of the Immigrant Services Society of British Columbia, which was at the forefront in settling families in that province.
Friesen recalls holding a news conference appealing to the public for help â housing options, job leads and volunteers who could step in to welcome the families about to arrive.
âThe responses crashed our systems, it was just unbelievable,â Friesen told The Sunday Magazine.
But a decade after Canada fast-tracked Syrians to safety, settlement workers and advocates say the system facing current refugees is far slower and constrained.Â
âItâs like night and day,â said Friesen. âWeâre in a very, very different climate right now.âÂ
Christina Clark-Kazak, professor of public and international affairs at the University of Ottawa agrees, and says Canada is âin a very different time now.âÂ
After an election that returned the Liberals to power with only a fragile minority, Clark-Kazak says the government is acutely aware that it must respond to domestic pressures â particularly from Conservative-leaning voters who are far less supportive of accepting refugees.Â
She says â as Canadians face rising living costs, ongoing challenges in finding affordable housing, and increasing pressure on public services â refugees and newcomers have too often been unfairly cast as scapegoats for deeper systemic issues.Â
âWe often focus on the demand side ⦠and we donât look enough at the supply side,â said Clark-Kazak. âPeople who are coming to this country are also trained as doctors, engineers and construction workers who could build housing.”Â
Palestinian woman waiting almost 2 years to bring family to Canada
Data from the Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada shows that there were 9,999 pending refugee claims at the end of 2015. However, as of Sept. 30, 2025, that number has climbed to 295,819.Â
Amal Kago came to Canada from Sudan as a government-assisted refugee in 2003, one of millions who have been displaced by its long-running civil war.Â
She recalls the process as being âbetterâ then, and that âit did not take [her] long to come to Canada.âÂ
But when Kago later helped co-sponsor a vulnerable woman from Sudan, the experience was far different.Â
The process was ânot easy,â she said, and stretched to five years before the woman finally reached Canada in 2024.Â
Rasha Youssef arrived in B.C. from Syria in December 2014. She was sponsored by a group of five people who were with her âall the timeâ to help her get settled.
Inspired to give back, she worked for a program for women that was a lifeline where newcomers could share their struggles, celebrate together and find joy through conversation.Â
Likewise, Hamoudi Saleh Baratta arrived in Canada in 2014 after surviving imprisonment and torture under Syria’s Assad regime.Â
He says Canadaâs refugee policy at the time was âlife-savingâ for him.
But both are unhappy with Canada’s refugee approach now.
The changing public mood is also directly affecting Regis Chiwayaâs work overseeing private sponsorship and settlement programs at MOSAIC, a Vancouver-based non-profit that supports refugees and migrants.Â
Chiwaya, who has worked in the sector for nearly five years, has seen âa significant increase in processing timesâ by overseas visa offices.Â
âIt doesnât matter whether itâs coming from an African visa office or somewhere in the Middle East, or Europe,â he said.Â
Critics say new border legislation aligns Canada’s immigration system with the U.S.
In 2020, he says, applications took one and a half to two years to process. Now, they often stretch to four years.
For example, under an initiative to sponsor migrants held indefinitely off the coast of Australia, Chiwaya says his team is still waiting for the applications of 60 people submitted in 2019 to be processed.Â
Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) has attributed the delays to post-COVID backlogs but Chiwaya says he hasnât seen any improvement.Â
At the same time, Chiwaya says he has seen âless and lessâ funding for MOSAIC’s programs from both federal and provincial governments.Â
In January 2024, the government launched a special measures program allowing Canadians to sponsor extended family members in Gaza on temporary visas.Â
It was initially capped at 1,000 applications and later increased to 5,000, all of which were filled. However, as of July 29, only 880 people have arrived in Canada under the program.Â
In November 2024, the government announced a pause on two of the three forms of refugee sponsorship. Â
The change was initially set to lift at the end of 2025, but has been extended until the end of next December.Â
âThe real-world implications are that people canât get here,â Clark-Kazak said. Â
In a statement to CBC News, the IRCC said that demand for that program was very high, producing long wait times and uncertainty for sponsors. The extension of its pause aims to help move toward more predictable processing times. Â
Ottawa is proposing other changes to the process, under the Strong Borders Act, which was introduced in June.
The proposed legislation seeks to amend several laws, including the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act.
Clark-Kazak says the legislation may block vulnerable people from making claims in the first place, would bar those who previously came to Canada without filing a claim, and fails to account for the volatile global situation and the complex, individual circumstances of asylum seekers.
In its statement, the IRCC said the changes will strengthen the integrity and efficiency of Canadaâs immigration and asylum systems by enhancing domestic information-sharing, improving how asylum claims are processed, tightening controls on immigration documents and applications, and helping prevent claim surges without harming vulnerable applicants.
Youssef, who came from Syria, now works at a law firm and runs her own small business. But she says sheâs noticed a cut of funds from âso many organizationsâ that support refugees.Â
Sheâs concerned that cuts risk increasing isolation and depression among newcomers.
Baratta shares her concerns, and says he’s “so unhappy” to see the programs that eased his route into Canada decline.Â
âI just call for politicians and people in power to not politicize humanitarian causes,â he said.Â










