
Internal report finds major flaws in program to recruit foreign nurses to Quebec
MONTREAL — Foreign nurses recruited to Quebec through a provincial government program faced “major obstacles” upon their arrival, including a lack of housing, child care and transportation, according to an internal report.
A rigorous training schedule, culture shock and fear of failure caused severe stress among the recruits, says the report produced by the province’s Immigration Department. It suggests they were not properly informed about the demands of the program or the reality of life in Quebec.
The $65-million initiative, announced in 2022, aims to bring 1,500 foreign nurses to Quebec by 2028 to work in regions of the province with acute nursing shortages. Candidates receive training at junior colleges, funded by the government, and are paid $500 a week.
But the November 2024 report on the first phase of the program, obtained through Quebec’s access to information law, paints an image of a poorly organized project that failed to prepare foreign nurses for what to expect when they uprooted their lives to come to Canada.