Scottish midwife faces deportation from Canada over English credentials
[From at least 1965, the Laurentian elite’s game plan is to replace Canada’s European founding/settler people with a Third World majority. Back in Pierre Trudeau’s time, immigration offices in the British Isles and Europe were closed — don’t want too many of THOSE sorts of people. Offices were opened in India and elsewhere. Recently, the Auditor-General reported as many as 150,000 fraudulent student visa applications in the invasion facilitated by son Justin Trudeau. The Immigration department was swamped, overwhelmed but, instead of shutting the doors, they simply threw up their hands. Not so with Scottish midwife Heather Gilchrist, a hardworking expert gainfully employed in Victoria. She is about to be deported because of a mix-up over her English language qualifications. You read that right: her English language qualifications. A hardworking, competent White Scot is not the sort of person our elite wants in Canada and, so, they are turfing her out.]
Scottish midwife faces deportation from Canada over English credentials
[From at least 1965, the Laurentian elite’s game plan is to replace Canada’s European founding/settler people with a Third World majority. Back in Pierre Trudeau’s time, immigration offices in the British Isles and Europe were closed — don’t want too many of THOSE sorts of people. Offices were opened in India and elsewhere. Recently, the Auditor-General reported as many as 150,000 fraudulent student visa applications in the invasion facilitated by son Justin Trudeau. The Immigration department was swamped, overwhelmed but, instead of shutting the doors, they simply threw up their hands. Not so with Scottish midwife Heather Gilchrist, a hardworking expert gainfully employed in Victoria. She is about to be deported because of a mix-up over her English language qualifications. You read that right: her English language qualifications. A hardworking, competent White Scot is not the sort of person our elite wants in Canada and, so, they are turfing her out.]
Tristin Hopper
25 Mar 2026
Just as Canada’s immigration system is wracked by revelations of unchecked fraud, it seems to have found time to threaten a Scottish midwife with deportation on the grounds she didn’t sufficiently prove she can speak English.
Heather Gilchrist, 58, speaks English as her mother tongue, and even completed the mandatory $330 certification course to prove as much.
But she told National Post a technical glitch prevented the certification from reaching immigration authorities, resulting in the surprise withdrawal of her work permit earlier this month.
A March 14 letter from an IRCC case officer told her they weren’t satisfied she could speak English, that her legal status had been withdrawn, and that she had 90 days to leave the country.
“If you do not leave Canada voluntarily, enforcement action may be taken against you,” it reads.
“I had just literally come off an on-call shift,” said Gilchrist, who has been working as a registered midwife in Victoria, B.C., since September.
A 10-year veteran of midwifery in the U.K., Gilchrist first came to Canada in October 2024, and obtained certification as a B.C. midwife after completing a bridging program at the University of British Columbia.
“I have hundreds of babies behind me, and I’m good at what I do,” said Gilchrist, who estimated that she’s spent $60,000 on the costs of moving to Canada and obtaining Canadian certification.
What’s suddenly put all of it in jeopardy is one of the most infamous components of the Canadian immigration process, at least for immigrants from Anglophone countries.
Most Canadian immigration streams require proof of a completed CELPIP (Canadian English Language
Proficiency Index Program). It’s a roughly three-hour test requiring the applicant to prove that they can read and understand English, and there is no exemption for the thousands of Canadian immigrants each year who speak it as a native tongue.
“It’s three-and-a-half hours of your life you’re never getting back,” said Gilchrist.
Gilchrist did indeed pass her CELPIP with flying colours. But in the online application for a post-graduate work permit, she says there was no prompt to submit it. As such, she assumed it was unnecessary, or that the test centre who administered her CELPIP had already forwarded the results to IRCC.
And Gilchrist wouldn’t be the first to say as much. Online immigration forums are filled with complaints from fellow post-graduate applicants saying that their permits were rejected due to technical difficulties in submitting a completed CELPIP.
“My PGWP was refused on March 10 due to missing language proficiency test result. I did attach the document but apparently it wasn’t shown in my application,” reads an anonymous March 18 post on a public Facebook group for post-graduate applicants.
A recent post on the website Justlaw details the experience of an immigrant in exactly Gilchrist’s situation: The sudden loss of work and residency status because of missing CELPIP results. “I did not see a clear option to upload language test documentation, so I was unaware that the score report had not been included in my application,” it reads.
The Ontario-based immigration consultancy Effizient Immigration encountered the problem so often that they profiled it in a Feb. 28 Youtube video. “Even though many applicants had completed the test before applying, the document was not uploaded correctly due to unclear instructions,” reads a description.
A Change.org petition calling out the CELPIP glitch has 1,600 signatures. It includes images of online IRCC application forms, showing that language results were not included in a checklist of required documentation.
“Many affected students had no way to attach the document in their application, nor were they given a second chance to submit it — even though the language test results predated the application date and were available if requested,” reads the petition.
As of press time, the problem doesn’t appear to have been fixed. The online form for a post-graduate work permit now features the warning “due to system limitations, the document checklist won’t ask you to provide language test results or proof that you graduated from an eligible field of study.”
Applicants are instead told to upload these documents as part of a “client information” portal that is separate from their application.
And due to technical difficulties, the documents can only be uploaded in the form of a single PDF. Uploading more than one will automatically delete the first.
For Gilchrist, she says the whole misunderstanding could have been patched up with a simple email from the IRCC; a notice of missing documentation, which she could have immediately forwarded in an email.
Instead, after 250 days of silence from the IRCC, the next she heard was that her application had been rejected and her residency status had been pulled effective immediately.
“Since you have not provided any documentation to demonstrate the minimum language proficiency, your application is refused,” reads the letter, signed by “Officer SV.”
The letter came far too late, said Gilchrist, to apply for a work permit via a different avenue. As such, she’s had to hand off her various midwife cases to co-workers and enter into a mad scramble to appeal the decision before she faces possible deportation in June.
“There’s something majorly wrong here. One hand does not know what the other hand is doing,” said Gilchrist. “I’m not asking for favours, I just want it to be fair.”
Gilchrist’s case has garnered headlines in both B.C. and Scottish media, but she says that so far, the only response she’s been able to obtain from the IRCC is a form letter informing her that she failed to prove her English proficiency.
“IRCC understands the disappointment that comes with a refused application. However, this office cannot provide any information or details regarding the reasons for a refusal other than the information provided in the refusal letter,” it reads.
Gilchrist’s sudden ejection from B.C. midwifing is awkwardly occurring amid a public push by the B.C. government to attract foreign talent into its health sector. In June, B.C. Health Minister Josie Osborne trumpeted a new program to fast-track the recruitment of “international” health professions, including doctors from the U.S.
“Since the campaign began, more than 2,250 doctors, nurse practitioners, nurses and allied health professionals have signed up for webinars and expressed interest in working in B.C.,” read a statement at the time.
It’s also ironically occurring amid a series of public scandals revealing the laxity of IRCC screening and processing. Just on Monday, an Auditor General’s report found that although more than 150,000 foreign nationals may have entered the country under fraudulent student visas in recent years, only 4,000 of those were ever investigated.
Gilchrist said she’s also reached out to Osborne, and to the office of Victoria Liberal MP Will Greaves, but to no avail. In the latter case, Greaves’ office told her “we do not have the authority to overturn or appeal decisions made by IRCC.”
Said Gilchrist, “it just takes one person to say this is outrageous, and fix it.” (National Post, March 25, 2026)