$435,000 Fine for Surrey Farm Raises Big Questions About Canada’s Migrant Worker System
A farm in Surrey has been hit with a massive $435,000 penalty for breaching Canada’s migrant worker laws — one of the largest fines ever issued in the province.
The sanction was issued to Kanwar Walia Farms on February 13, 2026, after federal inspectors found serious problems during an investigation.
According to federal records, the employer:
๐ซ Did not show up for a meeting with inspectors
๐ Failed to provide requested documents
๐พ Was not actively engaged in the business foreign workers were hired to work in
The farm had been approved to hire nearly 40 temporary foreign workers between 2020 and 2023 through Canada’s Temporary Foreign Worker Program.
Let that sink in.
Nearly 40 people brought to Canada for jobs that inspectors later questioned even existed.
Where Was the Oversight?
The Temporary Foreign Worker Program is supposed to ensure that migrant workers are only hired when there are no Canadians available for the job.
Before workers are brought to Canada, employers must receive approval through something called a Labour Market Impact Assessment (LMIA).
Yet somehow this company received approvals for dozens of workers.
Then inspectors discovered something deeply troubling:
๐ The employer was not actively engaged in the business those workers were hired to do.
So the obvious question becomes:
How did this get approved in the first place?
The Bigger Pattern
Investigations have already shown that British Columbia leads the country in penalties for violations involving migrant workers.
In fact, more than one-third of all federal penalties in Canada have been issued in B.C.
That raises uncomfortable questions about:
⚠️ oversight
⚠️ enforcement
⚠️ exploitation of vulnerable workers
Many migrant workers arrive in Canada believing they are coming for fair wages and opportunity.
But in too many cases they end up in situations where:
- they cannot easily leave their employer
- their housing may be tied to their job
- their immigration status depends on staying quiet
This makes them extremely vulnerable.
A System That Needs Real Transparency
What is perhaps most frustrating about this case is that the federal government is refusing to release more details, citing privacy concerns.
That leaves the public wondering:
- Were workers harmed?
- Were wages withheld?
- Were people brought to Canada for jobs that didn’t exist?
Without transparency, it’s impossible to know the full story.
Why This Matters
This issue isn’t just about one farm.
It’s about whether Canada’s immigration and labour systems are being used responsibly — or exploited.
If companies can:
• get approvals for dozens of workers
• fail to cooperate with inspectors
• refuse to provide documents
then something in the system is clearly broken.
Questions We Should All Be Asking
๐ค How did this farm receive approval to hire so many workers?
๐ค Who verifies that the jobs actually exist?
๐ค Why are details of investigations kept secret?
๐ค How many other farms are doing the same thing?
Transparency protects both migrant workers and Canadian workers.
Without it, abuse can hide in plain sight.
Final Thought
Canada prides itself on fairness and human rights.
But fairness requires accountability.
A $435,000 fine may sound large — but if the system allowed this to happen in the first place, we still have much bigger questions to answer.