Services in Ontario
Migrant workers
Childhood Arrivals Support and Advocacy Centre of Canada (CASA)
CASA helps people who came to Canada as a child or youth with their immigration law issues. CASA offers legal advice, representation, information, and referrals to those who:
- are under the age of 25
- live in Ontario
- arrived in Canada as a child or youth
- do not have immigration status or have temporary immigration status in Canada
- have no income or a low income
Email CASA to schedule an appointment at: info@casacentre.ca.
Website
casacentre.ca/Legal aid clinics
Legal Aid Ontario funds legal clinics across Ontario to provide free legal services to people with low incomes.
Community legal clinics serve people who live in their area. Some community legal clinics help with immigration and refugee problems. Search online for the clinic in your area using your postal code.
Speciality legal clinics provide services to specific groups of people. The following specialty clinics offer immigration help to the groups they serve:
- Centre for Spanish Speaking Peoples
- South Asian Legal Clinic of Ontario
- Chinese and Southeast Asian Legal Clinic
- Centre Francophone du Grand Toronto
- HIV & AIDS Legal Clinic Ontario
- Justice for Children and Youth
These law school clinics help people in Toronto with some refugee and immigration issues:
Website
legalaid.on.ca/services/legal-clinicsContact Information
Phone: 416-979-1446 Toll-free: 1-800-668-8258 TTY: 711Ontario Coalition of Service Providers for Refugee Claimants
This website lists some settlement organizations that help refugees across Ontario. For example, you might be able to get help with accessing housing, medical care, education, social assistance, and legal services.
Website
refugeehouses.caAgricultural Workers Alliance
The Agricultural Workers Alliance is a union for agricultural workers.
They’re associated with the United Food and Commercial Workers and help to organize farm workers in Canada. This includes helping workers negotiate their working conditions with their employers.
Website
ufcw.ca/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=2009&Itemid=198&lang=enContact Information
Toll-free: 1-877-778-7565Migrant Workers Alliance for Change
The Migrant Workers Alliance for Change supports migrants to stand up against bad bosses and fix problems with immigration. They advocate for better laws and fairness for migrant farm workers, care workers, students, and more.
Website
migrantworkersalliance.orgC.A.R.E for International Workers
C.A.R.E for International Workers is a program for temporary foreign workers that’s sponsored by the Windsor-Essex Bilingual Legal Clinic. A number of organizations work together to provide free legal services, English classes, health services, settlement services, and more.
Muslim Legal Support Centre
The Muslim Legal Support Centre (MLSC) is a legal clinic for Muslims who have low to modest incomes. MLSC offers free legal advice and other services in these areas:
- immigration
- family
- employment
- human rights
- housing
- criminal
To ask for legal help, you can complete MLSC’s intake form. Or you can call 416-350-2914 and leave a message for someone to call you back. MLSC also has free legal information sessions.
College of Immigration and Citizenship Consultants (CICC)
The College of Immigration and Citizenship Consultants (CICC) keeps a registry of Immigration Consultants and International Student Immigration Advisors that they monitor. Use this registry to find out if a professional is registered with the CICC. You can also use it to check if an Immigration Consultant has any discipline issues.
Francophone legal advice lines
Legal Aid Ontario (LAO) has 4 free regional advice lines that give legal information and advice in French by phone to people living in:
- Greater Toronto Area
- Southwestern Ontario
- Eastern Ontario
- Northern Ontario and parts of central Ontario including Barrie, Parry Sound, and Muskoka and Kawartha Lakes regions
The advice lines do not help with family law or criminal law matters.
Legal aid certificates
Legal Aid Ontario (LAO) can give you a certificate that pays for a lawyer to help you with your immigration or refugee problem.
To qualify, you must have a low income and a legal issue that LAO covers. For example, you might get free help from a lawyer:
- if you’re detained for immigration reasons
- to complete a Basis of Claim (BOC) form and prepare for your refugee hearing
- to prepare an appeal or application for judicial review
- to prepare a humanitarian and compassionate (H&C) application
- to apply for a pre-removal risk assessment (PRRA)
- if the government is trying to take away your refugee status
You can apply for a legal aid certificate online or by phone. Then you should find a lawyer that accepts certificates. You can also use the live chat on LAO’s website to ask for information about LAO services.
Website
legalaid.on.ca/immigration-servicesContact Information
Phone: 416-979-1446 Toll-free: 1-800-668-8258 TTY: 711The 519
In Toronto, The 519 provides legal help, health and wellness programs, education, housing support, and other programming to 2SLGBTQ+ communities.
The 519 Legal Advice Clinic offers 30 minutes of free legal advice from a lawyer by phone or video conference about:
- criminal, employment, family, housing, human rights, health, income security, wills and estates, and civil law
- legal issues surrounding gender affirming care
- immigration and refugee law with a focus on sexual orientation and gender identity
The 519 also has other law-related programs like the:
- Trans ID clinic
- Mock Hearing Program for LGBTQ+ refugee claimants
- A2J Case Support Program for 2SLGBTQ+ Black, Indigenous, and racialized people who have a low income and are navigating the criminal or family law systems
For legal help, fill out the intake form, email LegalClinic@The519.org, or book a call.
Law Society of Ontario – Lawyer and Paralegal Directory
The directory lists all lawyers and paralegals licensed to give legal services in Ontario. You can search by name, address or postal code, language, and area of law.
ABLE2 – Reach Legal Referral Services
If you live in the Ottawa or Champlain region and have a disability, ABLE2’s Reach Legal Referral Services may be able to help. They can refer you to a lawyer or paralegal for up to 3 hours of free legal advice in any area of law. But they cannot help with urgent legal issues.
If ABLE2 cannot help, they may refer you to community resources.
Book a meeting online, or call 613-761-9522 extension 452 or 453. You can also email reachlegalreferral@able2.org.
Website
able2.org/programs/reach-legal-servicesContact Information
Phone: 613-761-9522 extension 452 or 453Ontario Legal Information Centre
The Ontario Legal Information Centre offers a free 30-minute meeting with a lawyer to anyone in Ontario, online or by phone in English or French. The centre provides legal information on any legal topic, and referrals to services. Book a meeting online or call 1-844-343-7462 if you need help.
Legal Aid Ontario (LAO) – Domestic violence services
LAO offers 2 hours of free advice with a lawyer to people who have experienced domestic violence and need immediate legal help. You can get legal advice about family law, refugee and immigration law, or both. Ask your local shelter or community legal clinic if they offer this service or call LAO to find out more.
LAO might also pay for a lawyer to help you if you’ve been charged with assault while trying to defend yourself against your abusive partner.
Website
legalaid.on.ca/services/domestic-abuseContact Information
Phone: 416-979-1446 Toll-free: 1-800-668-8258 TTY: 711JusticeNet
JusticeNet is a not-for-profit organization that can help people find legal services when their income is too high for legal aid and too low to afford legal fees. Their website has a list of lawyers, paralegals, and mediators who charge reduced fees based on your income and family size. You must register and pay a small fee to use their services.
Website
justicenet.caOntario Ministry of Labour’s – Employment Standards Information Centre
The information centre is a telephone line that gives general information about the Employment Standard Act. They don’t give legal advice.
Website
ontario.ca/page/ministry-labour-immigration-training-skills-developmentContact Information
Phone: 416-326-7160 Toll-free: 1-800-531-5551 TTY: 1-866-567-8893Workers’ Action Centre
The Workers’ Action Centre gives workers free information and advice. Call them to get:
- information about your rights at work
- help figuring out how to deal with an employment problem
FCJ Refugee Centre
The FCJ Refugee Centre has free services for refugees and newcomers who do not have a secure or permanent right to stay. The centre can:
- help with paperwork, translation, and interpretation
- make referrals to immigration and refugee lawyers
- provide immigration case management for youth
- give information about social services, skills development, and counselling
They also provide temporary shelter for women and children, free food distribution, a primary health clinic for people without insurance, women’s programs, a youth group, and English classes.
The centre has free information sessions about refugee hearings and appeals.
Justice for Children and Youth (JFCY)
JFCY is a legal clinic that provides services to people in Ontario who are younger than 18 years. JFCY can give 30 minutes of free legal advice by phone in many areas of law including criminal, education, immigration, and human rights.
They can also help people in Ontario younger than 25 years who are homeless.
Law Society Referral Service
The Law Society of Ontario has an online Law Society Referral Service that gives you the name of a lawyer or licensed paralegal who will give free legal advice for up to 30 minutes in any area of law.
If you cannot wait for a lawyer or paralegal to call you back, or if you do not have a call-back number, email lsrs@lso.ca. If you’re in crisis or in custody, call 1-855-947-5255 or 416-947-5255, Monday to Friday, between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.
Barbra Schlifer Commemorative Clinic
The Barbra Schlifer Commemorative Clinic in Toronto offers free legal services to women and gender diverse people who have experienced gender-based violence. Their services include:
- family law help if you’re in an abusive relationship or have left one
- immigration and refugee law help if you’re fleeing gender-based violence, your spousal sponsorship broke down, or to separate your claim from your abusive partner
- independent legal advice and representation for survivors of sexual assault or intimate partner violence
- some criminal law supports and referrals
The Clinic also offers free:
- interpreter services 7 days a week, 24 hours a day help from family court support workers
- counselling and housing support services
For help, fill out the intake form or call the Clinic.
Canadian Centre for Victims of Torture (CCVT)
The Canadian Centre for Victims of Torture (CCVT) is a community organization that helps refugees, newcomers, and victims of torture, war, genocide, and crimes against humanity. The Centre provides free:
- mental health counselling and support
- settlement services and English language and skills training
- child and youth programs
The CCVT can also arrange for professional mental health assessments and reports for use in immigration and refugee proceedings.
The Human Rights Legal Support Centre (HRLSC)
The centre gives free legal information and advice to people who have experienced discrimination. If you’re Indigenous, press 4 to reach the Indigenous Service intake staff. The centre can:
- help you fill out an application to the Human Rights Tribunal of Ontario
- give legal advice about how to deal with discrimination
- provide legal representation at mediations and hearings, in some situations
There is also an online tool that can help you figure out if your situation might be discrimination.
Website
hrlsc.on.ca/en/homeContact Information
Phone: 416-597-4900 Toll-free: 1-866-625-5179 TTY: 416-597-4903 Toll-free TTY: 1-866 612-8627