回到
Oct 22, 2025

Northwest Territories outlines plan to recruit internationally-educated health professionals

Northwest Territories outlines plan to recruit internationally-educated health professionals
Addressing legislators on 22 October 2025, Northwest Territories Health Minister Lesa Semmler detailed new initiatives to bolster the territory’s strained healthcare workforce by courting internationally educated nurses, doctors and allied professionals. The plan includes streamlined licensing pathways, relocation grants up to CA $20,000 and priority permanent-residence referrals through the Northwest Territories Nominee Program (NTNP).

The territory has struggled with vacancy rates exceeding 23 % in remote clinics, forcing costly fly-in and agency staffing. Under the new framework, internationally educated professionals who accept two-year contracts in designated communities will receive fast-tracked licensing decisions within 10 days and on-arrival bridging programs at Aurora College.

For federal stakeholders, the initiative dovetails with Ottawa’s goal of improving healthcare access in the North while leveraging immigration to fill chronic skill gaps. Employers in Yellowknife and Inuvik can tap into the NTNP’s Employer-Driven stream and benefit from a dedicated federal work-permit processing desk announced earlier this month.

Global-mobility teams should note that remote-location bonuses are taxable and that temporary housing is limited; early coordination with territorial housing authorities is advised. The government plans to review results after 12 months, with the possibility of expanding incentives to mental-health and veterinary roles.
×