Presenter/s: Lynn Gaudet B.A., LLB., RCIC
Date: 08 April 2025
Time: 11 am to 2:15 pm Pacific
Location: webinar
Type: webinar and recording
Price: $75.00
CPD approval:
- CICC 3 CPD hours approved. Video recording will expire 08 April 2026. Includes 3 hours of Professionalism.
- LSBC 3 CPD hours approved. Video recording will expire on 31 December 2025. Attendance will provide you with 45 minutes of ethics and professional responsibility component for your BC Law Society reporting.
- Law Societies of Alberta, Manitoba, Newfoundland and Labrador, and the Barrister's Society of Nova Scotia
- For members of these Law Societies, consider including this course as a CPD learning activity in your mandatory annual requirements.
This 5-part series focuses on the RCIC Code of Professional Conduct providing expert guidance for both experienced RCICs and those just starting out. A very practical “how-to” approach is taken in each seminar to help RCICs properly fulfil all their professional duties to clients, as well as their duties to the College. All sessions will focus on common ethical pitfalls with examples, solutions and opportunities for participants to engage in resolving common issues for better practice management and preventing client complaints.
Session 1 – Your Code Duties: How Familiar Are You?
In this session, we examine ten common functions involved in immigration practice, delving into the sections of the Code of Professional Conduct that most guide an RCIC’s approach to each of them. Often these sections are dispersed throughout the Code, so we pull together provisions impacting, for example, working with other licensed practitioners in a way that meets the Code requirements and protects clients. Come for a refresher, and perhaps to better appreciate the blueprint offered by the Code to take the guesswork out of key elements of practice management and implement the necessary ethical protocols routinely.
TOPICS TO BE COVERED
This session will highlight and explain those sections of the Code that most impact the following regular activities of RCICs:
- How you find clients
- Communicating with clients
- What cases you can take on
- How to work with other licensed practitioners
- Fee collection
- Terminating a service agreement before completion
- Representing both spouses
- Representing both employer and worker
- Providing additional (non-immigration) services to clients
- Hiring interpreters and translators
College of Citizenship and Immigration - Essential Competency mapping
RCIC
Case Management
2.2 Engages in a process to ensure the client is fully informed and able to make a decision whether to proceed with the RCICs professional services and enter into a retainer agreement.
2.2.4 Advises the client of the RCICs scope of practice, personal competence and practice limitations.
2.9 Maintains accurate and current client records and documentation according to regulatory requirements.
Business Management and Leadership
4.1 Demonstrates leadership skills in the immigration and citizenship consulting practice.
4.1.3 Acts as an expert in the Canadian immigration and citizenship filed by providing advice and consultation to clients and other professionals.
Professionalism
6.1 Demonstrates and maintains competence in practice
6.1.2 Stays current and complies with legislation, regulation, professional standards, policies and guidelines.
Speaker/s:
Lynn Gaudet B.A., LLB. RCIC
Lynn is a Regulated Canadian Immigration Consultant (RCIC) who operated her own business as a sole practitioner in Calgary, AB for 17 years from 2004-2021, is now semi-retired in Nanaimo, BC. Her practice areas spanned a broad spectrum of immigration and refugee applications with a focus on Permanent Resident applications and criminal inadmissibility issues. She also has decades of experience in adult education - teaching, writing and developing instructional materials such as the Immigration Practitioner’s Handbook published annually by Thomson Carswell Ltd. from 2006-2012.
Lynn is currently an Adjunct Professor in the Faculty of Law at Queens University teaching in the Graduate Program in Immigration and Citizenship Law [GDipICL]. She has taught the Ethics and Professional Responsibility Course for the Program since its inception and has also served as the Coordinating Instructor with responsibility for the curriculum.
She has a B.A. in Communications from Simon Fraser University and an LL.B. from the University of Victoria. She is a licensee in good standing of the College of Immigration and Citizenship Consultants (CICC) and a member of the Canadian Bar Association, National Immigration Section.
While speakers and topics are confirmed at the time of publication, sometimes things happen which are beyond the control of ImmSeminars. If that happens substitutions or cancellations to speaker/s and/or topic/s may be necessary. In those cases, ImmSeminars will advise all registrants by email as soon as possible. We will also update the Imm Seminars website. We appreciate your cooperation in these cases.