Air Canada C FZUL Airbus A319 Landing 9300432527 Immigration Minister Urges Ottawa to Honor Quebec's Cap for Family ReunificationAir Canada plane landing (formulanone / Wiki Commons)

Quebecers who wish to bring a spouse into the country from abroad must wait 34 months, compared to 12 months for other Canadians. To bring in a parent, Quebecers must wait an average of 50 months, while the delay is only 24 months elsewhere in Canada.

The process takes longer in Quebec because the province has set a cap of approximately 10,000 admissions per year in the family reunification category.

In response, Miller told the province that since the two governments “have not found common ground” on the issue, he has decided to instruct his department to process about 20,500 pending files over the next three years. The department will process the backlogs — and any new applications — even if doing so exceeds the established limits.

He said the delays can have a “very significant” impact on families and the country has a “moral duty to find a solution to this issue.”

In a written statement, Fréchette said Miller’s decision would have a “considerable impact on Quebec’s permanent immigration limits … It is unacceptable.”

Under an agreement with the federal government, Quebec sets its own annual immigration targets, but the province only has complete control over the economic immigration stream — not the refugee and family reunification categories.

Quebec Justice Minister Simon Jolin-Barrette also denounced what he said was interference by Ottawa. The federal government, he said, should respect the will of the Quebec nation. “The limits are set,” he told reporters in Shawinigan.