Meet the Neighbors!- Immigrant Workers Center

The speaker talked mainly about work conditions for migrant manual workers. Among the topics he mentions, I note about domestic workers. Domestic workers, the majority of whom are Philippines, had been excluded from health/safety access because house was not considered as a work place. Through a campaign, health/safety regulations for the workers became legitimatized.

I asked about skilled workers: Skilled workers may have work conditions as good as Canadians, but they may face similar situations that jeopardize their jobs. Where can these people go for help? Usually there are only a handful migrant skilled workers in an entire company and isolated from each other. When something comes up, it tends to be treated as a special case, relatively not-so-serious, and thus there are hardly collective resources where they can refer.

I remember an online forum that skilled workers who are on the process of immigration share individual information in a pool to accumulate cases. A problem I see in this format is there is rarely collective actions, although they share information based on their own interest. So once things are over to a particular participant, the online forum means almost nothing. So, gathering is only transitory without a historical goal.

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