Canada’s hard hat economy a ticket to the middle class


 Nov 5, 2011 – 8:00 AM ET Last Updated: Nov 4, 2011 3:21 PM ET
Look out over most Canadian cities and you see construction cranes dotting the skyline, dozens of them and maybe more if you live in Vancouver or Toronto, the epicentre of a building boom that has been gaining steam for the better part of a decade.
Primarily the activity is around condos but there’s also hospitals, roads, sports stadiums and office towers — not to mention Alberta’s oil sands.
As the rest of the world grapples with the European financial crisis and sluggish growth in the United States, the cross-country construction boom has been Canada’s ace in the hole, providing the key economic building block that has been so lacking around the world: jobs.
While the savage housing collapse in the United States has left employment in the construction down 6.7-million from its 2008 peak, the number employed in Canada has soared to a record over the past two years. Even after a 20,100 give-back in October as the labour market softened overall, employment in the sector stood at 1.257-million, just above the previous November 2008 high.
The boom, supported by low interest rates, has helped spurred a virtuous cycle of job creation and consumer spending that has allowed the domestic economy to push ahead despite international turmoil.
“The great thing about construction is that it’s so local,” said Helmut Pastrick, chief economist for Central Credit Union 1, the main trade association for credit unions in British Columbia and Ontario. Unlike sectors like, say, banking or shipping where operations are often spread across a large geographically area, construction is much more focused, so the economic benefits stay local as well.
That goes especially for labour, which can’t be outsourced and provides one of the few sources of well-paying jobs to unskilled or unqualified workers such as immigrants, a key factor to the health of communities given this country’s traditionally high immigration rate.
That is the other thing. Unlike most other manual labour, it’s relatively well-paid. Due to labour shortages and high turnover, employers are willing to loosen the purse strings to keep valued workers. That means some take home $150,000 -plus a year.
For an immigrant from Guatamala or Somalia or Portugal, it’s a ticket to middle-class life and a future, as it was for successive waves of new Canadians going back more than a century. Inside FP Reporter John Greenwood chronicles the stories from Canada’s hard hat nation:
Santiago Martine has been working construction for 17 years, day in, day out, winter and summer.
A carpenter, Mr. Martine has been part of the work crew at a condo project on Toronto’s Queen Street West for the past six months, stripping formwork off concrete walls and pillars.
Next door, a massive new mental health centre is going up while across the road another condo tower is taking shape. The street is clogged with delivery vans and cement trucks while the local coffee shops are clearly benefiting from the hard-hat trade.
Asked what the boom means to him, Mr. Martine looks around at all the building activity.
“It’s amazing,” he says with a grin. “This means more money for families, more stability.”
If there is such a thing as a Canadian Dream, he has achieved it.
Born in Ecuador, he emigrated to Canada in the early 1990s in his mid-20s. He has raised three sons (one is in university, another in construction and the third owns his own company). He’s also helped his mother, his sister and her husband to follow him to settle in Canada as well.
A broad-shouldered man with his hair in a ponytail, Mr. Martine speaks with a mild accent.
Construction jobs are demanding, but the pay checks are generous. As a union member, he makes about $34 and hour and a lot more for overtime.
“I had the opportunity to go to Alberta but I didn’t go,” he says. “I got kids here, I got a wife here. The most important thing is family.”
Evaristo Rei and Domenic DiIorio first met as apprentice electricians 22 years ago and they’ve been working together on and off ever since.
Mr. Rei, who goes by “Everett” when he’s with friends, is a foreman. Both are part of a team of half a dozen electricians at a 20-floor condo tower at the corner of Bathurst and St. Clair.
For Mr. Rei, 45, the construction boom is a double-edged sword.
No one who wants to work is without a job for long. The trouble is, it’s hard to find good workers when you need them.
A slim, wiry man, he appraises a visitor with a critical eye, like he’s on the lookout for mistakes.
“I hear there’s more cranes in Toronto than any other city in the world,” he says during a coffee break. “So it’s good. But at the back of your mind you’re wondering who’s buying all the condos. But they wouldn’t be building them if people weren’t buying them.”
Mr. DiIorio has been working steadily since the recession of early 1990s when he briefly made a living doing home repairs.
“I was a ‘Mr. Handyman,’” he says.
Both men have always stayed close to Toronto, despite the allure of Alberta where a person with a half-decent trade can pay off a new pickup in two months if they’re lucky.
“We work for a good company,” says Mr. Rei. “They take care of their people, it’s not just about profit. There’s not a lot of companies like that.”
Like many in the industry, they live outside the city where houses are more affordable.
Mr. DiIorio, 42, lives in Brampton while his friend lives in Bolton. Both get up around 5am and get home around 12 hours later.
Most sites are a United Nations smorgasbord of nationalities, unlike previous decades when Italian and Portuguese were the predominant languages.
“You wouldn’t believe how far guys come,” says Mr. DiIorio. “But jeeze, there’s a lot of work. Just look at all the cranes!”
At 66 George Battaglin has just about seen it all. Trained as an architect, he’s currently a site manager for a small contracting company in Woodbridge but he’s been in the business for 41 years.
Construction “can be a good life for someone,” he says. “I think it’s a great industry – I mean, it powers the whole frickin’ city.”
Mr. Battaglin gave retirement a shot a while back but it didn’t appeal. “I was going nuts,” he says. “I don’t think I’ll ever retire. I’ll keep working as long as they’ll have me.”
Divorced, he has three grown kids and he lives in the suburb of Etobicoke. Over the years he’s worked in plenty of places, including Florida where he spent 13 years starting in the mid 1990s, and Alberta where he did a stint in the 1980s.
For the past several months he’s been working on a tower in downtown Toronto, and it’s been a challenge. The site itself is small with little room for storage and the traffic is always thick, making it almost impossible to get materials unloaded.
Lots of people would love to have jobs here but they lack the skills people like Mr. Battaglin are looking for. “We’re talking about craftsmen,” he explains. “When there’s so much work it’s hard to find them.”
It’s lunchtime and Bill White, a sheet metal worker, is sitting on a bench outside the CamH Centre for Addiction and Mental Health site on Queen Street, surrounded by a dozen other metal workers.
These are the guys who build the heating systems found in most modern buildings, and these days confidence is high around such trades.
“You can pick and choose [who you work for],” says Mr. White, a talkative man with a broad grin. He’s been contacted in recent weeks by three different companies looking to offer him a job.
At the same time he adds hastily, “I’m a pretty faithful guy,” having worked for his current employer for eight months. Indeed, once he worked for a company for 15 years.
There has been a lot of griping in the industry about the labour shortage, but according to Mr. White, they have only themselves to blame.
“The average guy is in his 50s and they’re only figuring out now that people are getting ready to retire,” says Mr. White.
The flow of young workers entering the trade got stopped cold in the last downturn in the late 1980s when high schools began cutting back on shop classes.
“They ripped all the shops out of the highs schools and put in dance studios!” declares Mr. White, who pauses a moment to give his colleagues time to agree. “That’s why they don’t have any young people. Dance studios! How do you make money out of that?”
Fernando Canonico, 38, is one of the youngest in the group of metal workers lounging on the grass beside Mr. White. Married with two kids, he lives in the bedroom community of Whitby about 45 minutes east of Toronto. His day starts early, at about 4:15 am, so he can get to work by 6:30 when his shift begins. If he’s lucky with the traffic, he can be back home by 6:00 pm.
The hours are demanding but Mr. Canonico is happy with his job. In a good year he makes at least $80,000, a lot more if he gets overtime since he gets paid at twice the normal hourly rate.
“I’ve never seen it as busy as it is now,” he says happily.
Mr. Canonico originally trained as a butcher but he didn’t like the work. So about 12 years ago, on the advice of his metal worker father-in-law he switched careers.
“This is a lot more fun,” he says.
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Canada: A nice place to visit but you can’t apply to live here


Nicholas KeungImmigration Reporter
Source: the start.com
Starting today, Ottawa will stop accepting applications for immigration sponsorships of parents and grandparents until 2014 in hopes of reducing a growing backlog.
In launching the first phase of an action plan to expedite family reunification Friday, Immigration Minister Jason Kenney said the federal government will take in 25,000 parents and grandparents in 2012, 43 per cent above its 2011 level. Meanwhile, fewer refugees, nannies and people applying to stay on humanitarian grounds will be admitted.
By cutting new applications and increasing intake, Kenney said he hopes to reduce the current backlog of 165,000 parents and grandparents by half in two years.
To relieve the pain of immigrants separated from their older relatives, Citizenship and Immigration Canada will start issuing the new Parent and Grandparent Super Visa on Dec. 1, which will allow members of that group to visit their families in Canada on a temporary basis for up to two years.
The visa — which Kenney said will take only eight weeks to process — will allow holders to make multiple entries over a span of 10 years. But there is a catch: Elderly visitors must obtain private Canadian health-care insurance during their stay here. And applicants must still meet the minimum income requirement to apply.
“So many families say to me they don’t necessarily want moms and dads or grandparents to immigrate permanently to Canada,” Kenney told a news conference in Mississauga.
“They just want them to be able to come and stay for an extended period, to help care for their kids when they are young and also be able to go back home, where they are well settled with other families and friends.”
Kenney said he is confident Canadian visa posts have the resources to handle the anticipated influx of applications for the super visas and the enhanced targets for sponsorships.
While the super visas are welcomed, critics say the mandatory medical insurance will create an instant barrier for many families, favouring those who are well-off.
“This requirement will create a two-tier access to our immigration system. We have argued that there’s no research or experimental evidence that parents and grandparents of new Canadians are an undue burden on our social and medical systems,” said Debbie Douglas, of the Ontario Council of Agencies Serving Immigrants.
The government plans to hold consultations next year on how to redesign the parents and grandparents program to avoid future large backlogs when it takes in new applications in 2014.
On Friday, the immigration department also belatedly released the breakdown of the number of immigrants it plans to accept in various immigration streams. In its annual report tabled Tuesday, Ottawa had only said categorically that it would maintain the same immigration level.
In 2012, the government plans to take in 157,000 economic migrants, down 3 per cent from this year, with the quota allotted for live-in caregivers-turned-permanent residents slashed by almost half to 9,000.
Canada will also take in 10 per cent fewer refugees — from 29,000 in 2011 to 26,000 in 2012. Spots assigned to people allowed to stay in Canada on humanitarian grounds will be down by 14 per cent to 7,900.
The only category that will see an increase in 2012 is family reunifications, up from 65,500 to 69,000, though the quota for spouses and children will be reduced from 48,000 to 44,000.

Immigration Minister hits pause on family reunification applications


Ottawa— Globe and Mail Update

Jason Kenney is walking a fine political line: seeking to slim a bloated immigration backlog without jeopardizing his Conservative government’s support among new Canadians – many of whom voted Conservative in the last election.
That careful balancing act was on display Friday when the Citizenship and Immigration Minister placed a two-year moratorium on applications from parents and grandparents seeking to reunite with family members in Canada.
The freeze is intended to thin afamily-reunification backlog that could soon produce wait times of up to ten years.
But to counter concerns that Mr. Kenney is trying to curtail family reunification, the Conservative government introduced a new and generous visa for parents and grandparents who want to stay with their family in Canada.
“We understand how important it is for Canadians, including new Canadians, to live with their loved ones,” Mr. Kenney declared at a news conference Friday.
But “we need to change the math.”
About 6 per cent of all immigrants to Canada are parents and grandparents of existing immigrants. But family-unification applications have far outstripped available spaces, creating a backlog of 165,000 applicants and wait times of seven years, which will lengthen to 10 years by 2018 if there are no changes.
“That is why it is absolutely essential that we bring in a temporary pause on applications,” Mr. Kenney said.
The moratorium is expected to reduce the backlog to about 50,000, while the government seeks to craft a new application process that matches the number of people who are allowed to apply to spaces available. In the meantime, the quota for parental and grandparental admissions will increase by 60 per cent, to 25,000 admissions a year, to further clear the backlog.
For those who waiting to immigrate or to get on the list, the new 10-year visa will allow parents and grandparents to stay for as long as two years at a stretch. However they must, if required, take a medical exam first; they must purchase private medical insurance while in Canada, and their children or grandchildren must be able to demonstrate that they can support the visiting relative.
Don Davies, NDP immigration critic, welcomed the new visa and the increased intake of parents and grandparents. But he added that the best way to overcome all of the backlogs in the immigration system would be to increase the intake from about 250,000 a year to about 330,000, or 1 per cent of the population.
“We’re not saying this for compassionate, fuzzy-wuzzy, lefty” reasons, Mr. Davies said. Increasing immigration levels are necessary to meet future labour shortages brought on by an aging society, he maintained.
Friday’s announcement caps a week of new initiatives by the Conservative government that focus on increasing the number of highly skilled and highly educated immigrants coming to Canada.
Overall, however, family-class immigrants continue to make up about 65 per cent of all applicants.

Family reunification changes would ease immigration backlog


OTTAWA— From Friday's Globe and Mail

The Harper government is moving to restrict applications for a program allowing immigrants to bring their parents and grandparents to Canada – part of a plan to eliminate a massive backlog in this category that has people waiting eight years.
But this is only part of what Immigration Minister Jason Kenney will announce on Friday at noon ET in Mississauga, immigration lawyers predict.
Experts say they expect Ottawa will also increase the number of parents and grandparents admitted annually under this family reunification program. The waiting list is currently at more than 150,000 people.
The Immigration Minister’s announcement will include details of a planned overhaul of the grandparents and parents portion of the program.
Mr. Kenney will also announce that the Department of Citizenship and Immigration will hold consultations in early 2012 to solicit opinion from Canadians on how best to revamp the program.
The federal government each year receives about 40,000 applications from grandparents and parents of immigrants and admits only about 17,500. At the same time, the backlog grows by 13,000 to 14,000 annually.
Mr. Kenney hinted at his plans at a Commons committee in late October, saying the two best ways to eliminate the backlog of applicants are to cut the number of applications considered each year and to increase admissions.
“Is the department going to have to issue directives limiting the number of new applications that we receive? I think that it is a solution that we have to consider,” he told the Commons immigration committee last month.
Vancouver-based immigration lawyer Richard Kurland said he expects the Harper government will restrict applications and increase approvals as a solution to the backlog.
“I think the only way out is going to be a Sound of Music solution, where ‘When a door gets closed, somewhere, a window gets opened,’ ” Mr. Kurland said.
The immigration lawyer suggested Mr. Kenney could find a way to make it work.
“So even if applications are capped, the minister can direct that temporary visas be issued in order to bring families together until the backlog is processed.”
Sources said consultations in 2012 will be used to seek ways to redesign the program to prevent future backlogs. All options are on the table, including different rules for who can sponsor parents and grandparents, or increases in the amount of income required to support newcomers under the program, the sources said.
Mr. Kenney promised to address the backlog in the parents and grandparents class during the federal election campaign earlier this year. Parents often apply for permanent residence on the advice of Canadian visa officers after they are refused a visitor visa, lawyers say.
Immigration lawyers say a more permanent solution to the backlog should include changing visitor visa rules.
They say Ottawa should devise a way to allow parents of immigrants to visit without incurring the risk of a drain on medicare if they fall ill while in Canada.
Mr. Kurland estimated that about 20 per cent of those parents and grandparents in the queue for permanent residency would withdraw their application if they could instead secure a long-term, multiple-entry visa that stipulated they cover their own health insurance in Canada.
Canada expects to admit 254,000 immigrants this year in total.

Ottawa urged to help expedite licences for foreign-trained doctors


Globe and Mail Update

The federal government should fund temporary work programs that help foreign-trained doctors get their licences faster, the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada says.
Andrew Padmos, the college’s chief executive officer, said between 6,000 and 10,000 doctors can’t practise in Canada because there aren’t enough spots in residency programs.
“If they require residency, there are severe constraints,” Dr. Padmos told the Commons standing committee on human resources. He said that’s because there are only slightly more residency spots in Canada than there are medical school graduates each year. “It’s insufficient to deal with several thousand foreign-trained grads,” he said.
The committee is looking for ways to speed up the recognition of foreign qualifications in a bid to improve work opportunities for immigrants and make Canada more economically competitive.
Dr. Padmos said qualifying doctors can sometimes get around the residency backlog by working under the temporary supervision of a Canadian-trained physician – but that option has its own price tag.
“The federal government should fund the salary of the international graduate, plus something for the supervisor to make it possible,” he said after the meeting.
He also recommended the creation of an arms-length observatory to study health and human resources and advise the provinces on where doctors and specialists are most needed.
Governments have long promised to help internationally trained professionals find work at their skill level. In 2009, the federal government announced workers in eight fields would not have to wait longer than a year to find out how the credentials they obtained abroad compare with Canadian standards. At the time, the government promised to add foreign-trained doctors to the list of professionals by the end of 2012.
Robert Young holds the Canada Research Chair in multilevel governance and his research includes immigration and settlement policies. He said that while the federal government’s efforts to reduce wait times on qualifications are laudable, they often aren’t the biggest barrier for professional immigrants – whether they are doctors or work in another field.
“In many cases, it’s not the credentials that matter but getting the Canadian experience,” Mr. Young said in a telephone interview.

Canadian immigration by the numbers

By Tobi Cohen and Jordan Press, Postmedia News

Read more: http://www.canada.com/Canadian+immigration+numbers/5647556/story.html#ixzz1ckHe218W



Highlights from Citizenship and Immigration's annual report:
- Canada expects to have welcomed about 260,000 immigrants to Canada by the end of this year;
- Canada admitted 280,681 permanent residents in 2010, an increase of 11.3 per cent over 2009 and the highest level recorded in 50 years;
- Canada welcomed 182,276 foreign workers in 2010, an increase of 2.2 per cent over the previous year;
- The number of international students permitted into Canada in 2010 was up 13 per cent over 2009 to 96,157;
- Canada issued 12,452 temporary resident permits in 2010 to foreigners deemed inadmissible under the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act but who offer compelling reasons for special consideration;
- By 2013, such foreign nationals will be required to provide their biometrics as part of a border security initiative;
- The number of asylum claimants fell by 10,000 in 2010, in large part due to the introduction of temporary resident visa requirements for people from the Czech Republic and Mexico;
- Immigration levels for 2012 will remain between 240,000-265,000;
- For the second consecutive year, Canada resettled 12,000 refugees in 2010;
- 26.6 per cent of new immigrants don't know either official language; 57.1 per cent know English, six per cent know French, 10.3 per cent know both;
- Authorities fell shy of processing time targets for family class applicants. Officials expect to meet the 12-month target by March.


Read more: http://www.canada.com/Canadian+immigration+numbers/5647556/story.html#ixzz1ckHjifwM

Chinese rich are keen to emigrate


By Shi Jing and Yu Ran (China Daily)

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11
Chinese rich are keen to emigrate
SHANGHAI - About 60 percent of the rich Chinese people, each of whom has a net asset of at least 60 million yuan ($9.44 million), said they intended to migrate from China, a report has found.
About 14 percent of them have either already migrated from China or have applied for migration.
The three most favored destinations by the Chinese rich are the United States, Canada and Singapore. The US is the first choice of some 40 percent of the people interviewed, according to a white paper jointly released by Hurun Report and the Bank of China (BOC) on Saturday.
According to US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), the number of Chinese applicants for investment immigration has exceeded applications from any other country or region.
Last year, the USCIS issued 772 EB-5 visas, meant for investor immigrants, to Chinese people. They account for 41 percent of the total EB-5 visas issued by the agency.
"Among all the destinations in terms of investment immigration, the US always outstand all other options as the country does not impose any quota," said Jiao Lingyan, a client executive of the investment immigration department of the Beijing-based GlobeImmi International Education Consultation Co.
"The minimum amount required for investment immigration to the US is $500,000. But it should be noted that this applies to investments in projects recommended by authorities in the US. People considering these projects should take into account that they may not make profits," Jiao said.
"It is worth noting that the minimum amount for investment immigration will be raised in the coming years, because the number of rich people in China is rapidly growing," she said.
Among the 980 people interviewed by Hurun Report and the BOC, one-third said they have assets overseas, which on an average account for 19 percent of their total assets.
While 32 percent of the interviewees said they have invested overseas with a view to immigrate, half of them said they did so mainly for the sake of their children's education.
Zhang Yuehui, a Beijing-based immigration expert, said children's education is also the top concern among those who want to immigrate.
"A growing number of parents in China have realized that children growing up in the examination-oriented education system in China will find it hard to compete in an increasingly globalized world," Zhang said.
Wang Lilan, 38, a mother of two who immigrated to Australia from her home province of Fujian two years ago, was one of those parents.
"My 12-year-old elder daughter used to do her homework very late into the night. But here in Australia, she does quite a lot practical assignment, in a playful way. And she has more spare time to do the things she likes," Wang said.
"I feel very delighted to see my children having fun while studying," Wang said.
Chinese immigrants are also getting younger, with the largest group aged between 25 and 30, compared to the 40-45 age group in the past, Zhang said.
China Daily

Employers failing to put diversity into practice


Many Canadian employers are finding it easy to put diversity and inclusiveness into a mission statement but difficult to put them into practice, according to a white paper by Deloitte based on roundtable discussions in eight cities across Canada with representatives of business, community-based diversity and immigrant organizations, and Deloitte professionals.
Often, organizations are clinging to outdated notions, such as requiring employment experience in Canada, said Welcome to Canada. Now what? Unlocking the Potential of Immigrants for Business Growth and Innovation. The dreams of educated newcomers are being eroded by unrecognized credentials, no Canadian experience, a lack of support for networking and lingering biases in recruitment.
“Canada does have one of the best immigration processes globally but there is a broken promise because we tell people that their skill-set is going to be recognized and then they can’t get a job and they end up driving taxis,” said one participant.
A lack of fit or acceptance was another issue raised by the white paper, which said companies have much to gain by broadening their thinking.
“Only by taking calculated risks and being open to learning from the experiences of immigrants will Canadian companies fully capitalize on the potential for innovation and growth that comes with their hiring,” said Jane Allen, a partner and chief diversity officer at Deloitte.
It’s time to put the theory of diversity into action — more proactive steps must be taken to quickly enable skilled foreign-born workers to contribute to Canada’s economy and achieve their own dreams, said the white paper. Various provinces offer programs through community organizations and government ministries — these and other initiatives provide a solid base of best practices for employers across Canada.
“Often, organizations don’t see the systemic barriers to integration and acceptance that have been created within their workplaces. Considering Canada’s global reputation for welcoming immigrants, it doesn’t make sense that they exist. By erecting barriers to employment for foreign-born workers, we’re actually blocking our own potential for innovation and growth,” said Allen in Welcome to Canada.
What we discovered is that the specific challenges and success stories differ from province to province, but the call to action was consistent: Canada needs to do a better job of integrating skilled, foreign-trained workers into our workforce by identifying the barriers to integration and breaking them down.”

Saskatoon drives Canada’s economy

As Saskatchewan benefits from more than $10 billion in new mines and expansions, Saskatoon is staying out front in the race to lead Canada’s economic growth.

The Conference Board of Canada has predicted that Saskatoon’s economy will expand by 4.1% this year, leading the nation’s economic growth right through to 2013. The city’s nearest rival was Calgary, where the economy was expected to grow by 3.4%.

Tim LeClair, Chief Executive Officer of the Saskatoon Regional Economic Development Authority (SREDA), said that other sectors of the city’s diverse economy had also played their part, including manufacturing, agriculture, transportation and communication.

Business entrepreneurs were also creating more jobs, with more than 1,000 new business licenses issued every year to Saskatoon entrepreneurs.

"If each of those new businesses has 1.5 employees or higher, that's tremendous job creation," says LeClair.

In addition, the strong mining investment is creating high quality jobs, says LeClair, with local mining companies expecting to recruit between 500 to 700 engineers. "These positions have annual incomes of $150,000 and up.”

Saskatoon's unemployment rate for August, 2011 was 5.1% – the fourth lowest rate of any metropolitan area in Canada. 

Saskatchewan province enjoys the lowest unemployment rate in the country (4.5% in August), with full-time employment recently reaching an all-time high of 454,300 in August 2011. 

Canada faces decade of trades shortages


31 October 2011
Insulators and steamfitter-pipefitters top the list of sought after trades
Canada's ageing work force and multi-billion dollar resources projects are driving labour and skills shortages in the construction trades, with up to 320,000 new tradespeople needed between now and 2019.

Alberta, where a resurgence in mining activity has seen $193 billion in major projects on its books, accounts for almost half of the projected shortfall, with 157,000 new workers needed by 2019.

Insulators and steamfitter-pipefitters are the trades most sought-after, says the Construction Sector Council, a finding bourne out by SAIT's School of Construction in Calgary.

"As with all the trades right now, there seems to be a shortage of them and this one is rising to the top," says the Dean of SAIT's School of Construction, Larry Rosia.

Rosia adds that the challenges of keeping pace with fluctuations in demand for various trades is complicated by mining’s cyclical nature, particularly in energy-rich provinces where the top trades in demand can change quickly.

"It takes us four years to put out a journeyman, so for us to get ahead of these shortfalls is always a challenge and something we strive to work with industry to accomplish."

Rosia said that skill shortages existed across the board in trades.

"There are pockets across Canada where activity is particularly intense. Looking at the number of large-scale industrial projects in each province provides a strong indication of where the trades will be most in demand. The challenge is that all the sectors are looking for people."

Alberta’s energy sector ramps up hiring


31 October 2011
Skills shortage of 77,000 forecast for Alberta, Canada
A “perfect storm” is developing as Alberta’s baby boomers leave the workforce in unprecedented numbers, and the province’s buoyant oil and gas sector continues to ramp up hiring.

Elsbeth Mehrer, director of research, workforce and strategy for Calgary Economic Development, said Calgary business leaders cited the labour shortage as the biggest challenge facing them over the coming year, but the latest figures reveal a longer-term problem.

Over the next decade, the number of Alberta workers aged 55 and older is predicted to top more than a million – that’s about 25 per cent of the total workforce, according a recent report by the Alberta government.

By 2019, the province has also predicted a shortage of 77,000 people across all industries, in particular the burgeoning oil & gas sector that fuels Alberta’s economy and job growth.

Greg Stringham, vice-president with Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers, said he expected to see substantial growth in the sector, with increased oil production stemming from new advances in drilling technology.

"It's up by about 200,000 barrels a day in our forecast," says Stringham."That alone is pulling on the drilling rigs and support services and leading to a need for labour and manpower in that area."

Alberta's oilsands currently employ about 75,000 people (both directly and indirectly) and that figure is expected to shoot as high as 900,000 by 2035.

There are already signs in the north and northeast of the province that employers are struggling to fill labour shortages, with towns like Fort McMurray, Lloydminster, Cold Lake and Lac Labiche hardest hit.

According to Statistics Canada, Alberta has created 97,700 jobs in the 12 months while the Calgary region has created 20,400. The province is expected to lead the nation in job growth over the next 20 years.

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