Foreign Retirees Could Benefit From Immigration Bill

It’s one of two proposals in the bill aimed at boosting foreign retirements

ByABC News
May 24, 2013, 4:56 PM

May 24, 2013— -- PHOENIX — Let's call it the snowbird provision.

Buried in more than 800 pages of the immigration reform legislation currently under debate is a proposal that would allow Canadians to visit second homes in the U.S. for up to eight months at a time.

It’s one of two proposals in the bill aimed at boosting foreign retirements here.

Canadian snowbirds and real estate investors have already made their mark in Phoenix.

They flocked to Phoenix in recent years when home prices plummeted and there was a glut of homes on the market. Canadians lead the pack of foreign buyers here, by far.

They bought more than 15,000 homes since 2009, according to Information Market, a firm that analyzes real estate data.

While Canadian buying has slowed from its peak in 2011, buyers keep coming from up north. Cécile Bastin, 49, and Sylvain Coté, 50, came to town last week from Windsor, Ontario in search of a winter vacation property in Phoenix.

“Some place where we can easily access,” Bastin said. “And we can just put our feet up, enjoy the weather, eat outside, and say, ‘Oh, they are under 10 feet of snow up there in Canada!’”

Bastin and Coté still work in Canada, but anticipate longer visits to their future winter home once they eventually retire.

Tucked into the Senate immigration bill are two provisions to give foreigners like Bastin and Coté even more flexibility for spending time in the US when they hit the age of 55.

One allows Canadians who own or rent property here to visit for eight months at a time, up from the current six-month maximum.

Another grants foreigners from any country three-year, renewable visas if they invest half a million dollars of cash in real estate, as long as they come with their own health insurance.

Neither provision allows beneficiaries to work in the U.S.

Canadian John Ryan, who is a part-time Arizonan, particularly likes the idea of retiree visas for property owners.

We reached Ryan by phone at his primary residence in British Columbia, but he also owns a home and four rental properties in Phoenix. He’s just a few years shy of the 55-year age requirement.

“It would allow me to enjoy the property in the U.S. much more than I currently do,” Ryan said.

Ryan said the proposed retiree visa could be a boon to the local Phoenix economy, in that it would encourage even more fellow Canadians to winter in the U.S.

“Canadians will be down purchasing retirement homes, and everything that goes along with that, furniture, food meals, restaurants, entertainment,” Ryan said.

Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-NY) first introduced a proposal for something similar to the retiree visa in 2011, at a time when the housing market was overrun with vacant homes.

Back in 2011, he explained that proposal on CNBC, which was aimed at foreign property owners.

“There are loads of people who would like to live here.,” Schumer said. “Loads of people. This is a way of letting them live here and helping us solve our housing crisis.”

Schumer is now a member of the Gang of Eight senators who drafted the comprehensive immigration reform bill. He also backs allowing Canadian snowbirds eight-month visits.

One of the main champions of that provision is the Canadian Snowbird Association, a Toronto-based group that represents 70,000 traveling Canadians, and has registered lobbyists in Washington, D.C.

Evan Rachkovsky, a research officer with the association, said his organization worked closely with Schumer’s office to get the provision included in the bill.