Borderlines

Steven Meurrens and Deanna Okun-Nachoff

A podcast for the discussion of Canadian immigration law and policy, although we often delve into other topics. Each episode features 2-3 lawyers, academics, politicians, and stakeholders discussing current migration issues. Hosted by Steven Meurrens and Deanna Okun-Nachoff, two immigration lawyers in Vancouver, British Columbia. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  1. DEC 16

    #193 - Evacuate

    We return to Afghanistan, and to the unfinished work Canada left behind. Following our recent conversation with retired Canadian Forces member Cory Moore, we are joined by three guests from Aman Lara, a Canadian registered charity working on refugee extraction, resettlement and protection. Jon Feltham, Executive Director of Aman Lara and retired Canadian Armed Forces member Julia Aitken, Program & Communications Director at Aman Lara Denis Thompson, Major-General (Ret’d), former commander of NATO Task Force Kandahar We examine Canada’s response to Afghans who worked alongside Canadian and NATO forces, through the lens of recent Federal Court decisions that highlight how many individuals were left behind after the fall of Kabul in 2021. We discuss: The reality faced by Afghan interpreters, contractors, and families still in hiding How Canada’s approach relied on “process without a plan” The bureaucratic gaps between DND, Global Affairs, and IRCC How veterans became de facto evacuation coordinators during the 2021 crisis How Ukraine’s uncapped emergency program contrasted so sharply with Afghanistan What Aman Lara has accomplished (over 7,000 evacuations and 5,800 resettlements) and why the work is far from over 🔗 Aman Lara is a registered Canadian charity. If you’re looking for a meaningful way to support refugee protection and resettlement efforts, we’ve included a donation link here - https://www.canadahelps.org/en/dn/130744 🎧 Subscribe for in-depth conversations on Canadian immigration law, policy, and the human consequences behind the headlines. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    1h 5m
  2. DEC 10

    #192 - Preventing Study Permit Refusals

    Steven and Deanna break down the rapidly shifting landscape of Canadian study permits amid IRCC’s newly released 2026 international student caps. With approval rates falling sharply in 2024–2025 and IRCC committing to fixed national intake numbers, study permits are now effectively being graded on a curve, making strong applications more critical than ever. We discuss the most common refusal grounds they see in practice, including: ▸ Weak or incoherent study plans Why study plans are now a top refusal ground, what officers look for, how jurisprudence has evolved, and what applicants must show to demonstrate a logical academic and career trajectory—even for minors. ▸ Dual intent, PGWP confusion, and long-term plans How to candidly discuss the possibility of a PGWP without triggering a refusal, and how applicants can articulate return-home benefits while acknowledging genuine motivations. ▸ Financial sufficiency and unexplained deposits Why bank statements are scrutinized more heavily than ever, how to document source-of-funds properly, and why even technical checklist omissions can sink an otherwise strong application. ▸ Family ties and home-country incentives How IRCC evaluates “significant family ties” in and outside Canada, and why applicants should proactively explain their home-country obligations to address concerns about leaving Canada at the end of their stay. ▸ Underdocumented travel history and other overlooked factors Simple omissions that lead to refusals—such as failing to include exit/entry stamps, prior visas, or proof of assets. Whether you are an international student, an immigration professional, or someone following Canadian immigration reform, this episode offers practical guidance on how to build a more compelling study permit application in a challenging and tightening system. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    28 min
  3. NOV 17

    #189 - The 2026–2028 Levels Plan: Behind the Numbers

    Canada’s new 2026–2028 Immigration Levels Plan is here, and it’s a lot more confusing than media headlines suggest. This episode unpacks how the Carney government has quietly layered “one-time initiatives” on top of the official levels plan, including a massive cohort of protected persons and in-Canada temporary residents transitioning to permanent residence, and why the oft-repeated topline of 380,000 PRs is misleading once you add those extra streams. Topics discussed also include shrinking the temporary resident share of the population, the quiet rollback of francophone immigration targets, cuts to IRCC’s budget, and the rule-of-law issues when the same legal criteria suddenly produce totally different outcomes and higher refusal rates. We also answer live listener questions on CEC, work experience across multiple NOCs, why there aren't many ITAs, the H-1B pathway, and more. 5:05 – The “math’s not mathing”: topline 380,000 vs extra 140,000 PRs 19:00 – Temporary resident caps, extensions, and the missing data 27:26 – Francophone targets quietly reduced & what that signals 33:06 – Massive rebound of the Provincial Nominee Program (PNP) in 2026 36:06 – H&C: 1,100 admissions and a 50-year backlog 37:35 – Budget cuts, IRCC HR reductions & shift to automation 43:04 – Potential new categories: researchers, senior managers, allied military 44:49 – Listener Q&A: is there hope for CEC? TR→PR vs CEC draws 48:02 – Are CEC ITAs being stalled to protect processing time stats? 49:16 – CEC work experience across multiple NOCs & “primary NOC” confusion 51:00 – Can wrong NOC coding sink an otherwise solid CEC application? Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    56 min
4.8
out of 5
67 Ratings

About

A podcast for the discussion of Canadian immigration law and policy, although we often delve into other topics. Each episode features 2-3 lawyers, academics, politicians, and stakeholders discussing current migration issues. Hosted by Steven Meurrens and Deanna Okun-Nachoff, two immigration lawyers in Vancouver, British Columbia. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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