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Family who immigrated to Canada says they couldn’t stay amid high cost of living

A Ukrainian woman who immigrated to Nova Scotia says she could not keep up with the high cost of living.

Tetiana Melnyk moved to the province in March 2023 and took on three jobs so should she could begin to build a life for her two children.

After working for five months, she was able to bring them to Canada.

“I had maybe $3,000 a month,” she recalls. “I worked without days off from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.”

Melnyk says she worked so much there was little time to spend with her kids — and they missed her.

“After three months I understood it was not good for me and my children, and I needed to go home,” she says.

She returned home to Georgia, a country which sits at the intersection of Europe and Asia.

Melnyk says she’s now able to make ends meet with just one job, and she also has family nearby for support.

Melnyk’s story comes as the Atlantic Economic Council releases a new immigration report showing rates have climbed rapidly over the last decade.

Immigration reached a record 32,000 in the region in 2023, up from nearly 6,000 in 2013. But it says the five-year retention rate is around 50 per cent.

“There are challenges around housing, around access to doctors, access to education — schools are growing in size, too. So those factors do negatively impact the ability to retain people, so that’s something we need to get on top of,” says senior researcher Patrick Brannon.

An organization that helps newcomers to Nova Scotia agrees there is room for improvement despite the current services offered.

A senior leadership team member with the Immigrant Services Association of Nova Scotia (ISANS) says an area where work is ongoing is around helping to fill labour shortages.

“So (that means) being able to make sure that people who come in who have

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