:
Thank you, Mr. Chair, honourable members.
Good morning. My name is Jennifer Steeves and I am the executive director of the Canadian Automotive Repair and Service Council, CARS for short. Thank you for inviting us to present today.
CARS is a national sector council and addresses the needs of one of the largest and most important components of the Canadian labour market.
The Canadian automotive power repair and service sector is a large and growing sector, comprised of approximately 39,000 businesses, employing about 254,000 workers. It keeps some 17 million Canadian vehicles on the road. More than half of the enterprises are small shops employing one to four staff.
Employers across Canada from our industry have indicated that a lack of qualified staff adversely affects the profitability of their organization. Almost half of our employers say their businesses suffer from a lack of qualified staff. Over the next decade the industry is estimating a supply demand between 24,000 and 39,000 workers. These expected supply shortfalls will put even more pressure on industry employers to retain existing workers and develop more expertise from within.
First let me say that CARS applauds the Government of Canada on its commitment to employability issues by announcing financial supports geared towards increased employability of all skilled trades people in Canada. These measures and incentives will benefit the small, independent service shops that make up the bulk of our industry.
To further the government agenda, national sector councils are well positioned to be part of the solution to employability issues faced by Canadians. CARS was among the very first sector councils established in 1988. The councils bring together the stakeholders affected by human resource issues, including employers, industry organizations, employees, and organizations providing training and professional development.
Between short- and long-term initiatives related to human resource development training, sector councils gather labour market information, develop occupational standards, develop curriculum, and monitor the standards of program delivery. It is our belief, based on experience, that the employability of our sector's workers depends on the ability to conduct ongoing skills assessment, undertake ongoing skills upgrading, and access training that meets current needs.
CARS has a proud history of working well with all levels of government, educational institutions, private trainers, and motive power industry leaders. These partnerships are increasing public awareness of employment opportunities and skills required in our workforce, enhancing standards of excellence in post-secondary program delivery, and making skills upgrading and professional development as universally accessible as possible by employing interactive distance learning, IDL, which is our satellite-based training delivery system.
The CARS IDL system is an excellent example of how initial government investment has continued and grown to serve the training needs of the industry. CARS interactive distance learning offers more than 320 technical and non-technical courses via satellite broadcast to industry workers and employers at 700 shops across the country. This professional development training is broadcast five days per week and is now being expanded into the collision repair industry.
Our sector has to be proactive to ensure that its training remains current, given both the current rate of technological change and the expected acceleration and complexity posed by such things as alternate fuel technologies, new hybrid cars, and electronics. In fact, electronics now control more than 86% of all systems in the typical vehicle. Advanced electronics computerized telematic systems sustain safety, environmental, communications, and entertainment systems on the modern vehicle. New field technology, such as hybrids, fuel cell, ethanol 85 and advanced diesel, for example, will have a significant impact on the motive power repair and service industry.
Given the current trends in technological advancement, it is easy to understand that our industry employees need to access quality and relevant training to further develop their skills so they can continue to meet the needs of the Canadian motoring public.
New employees entering the industry need to have sound foundational skills that they continue to build on throughout their careers. To that end, post-secondary training and apprenticeship need to provide students with quality relevant training. Once in the workforce, employees need access to ongoing, flexible, relevant training options, while looking to employers to provide both the time and financial support to make skills upgrading possible.
In 2005 CARS began an essential skills project to build essential skill profiles for key occupations. We also developed an assessment tool and benchmarked essential skill levels for workers, apprentices, and students in these occupations. Each participant was assessed for current skill levels in reading, numeracy, and document use. The overall results and the profiles developed showed that one industry worker out of three needs to improve his or her essential skills to function well in their industry occupation.
The knowledge gathered by CARS through this project will be used to educate industry and educators on existing skill-level requirements, create all nine professional development tools, infuse more essential skill elements into our own interactive distance learning, and deliver trainer sessions that demonstrate the impact of essential skills on learning.
Considering the future labour pool, CARS is currently conducting new research to examine the integration challenges faced by internationally trained workers. The objective of this research is to identify information gaps on the employment of internationally trained workers, existing skills assessment and recognition initiatives, and initiatives CARS could implement if required to address any service gaps.
Based on this background I've given you, CARS would now like to contribute to the national consultation on employability issues by making the following three recommendations:
(1) Re-introduce a partnership between government and industry to leverage training dollars. We suggest this because it is our experience that the best premise for building a dynamic, skilled Canadian workforce is the development of an active training culture. Such a training culture can only exist if all stakeholders have a vested interest in its success.
(2) Expand distance learning. CARS research study established an interest and readiness on the part of employers and employees in embracing e-learning as a training option, based on the additional flexibility it offers.
(3) Build a range of online professional development tools such as skills assessment that industry employees can use throughout their careers.
In conclusion, I'd like to sum up the all-around benefits of such initiatives: employers gain a more productive labour force at reduced training cost; employees gain greater employability and earning power by being able to service a product in less time than prescribed at the flat rate; consumers have well-functioning, safe automobiles; government gains a more productive and competitive sector with reduced EI costs.
Thank you very much.
:
Good morning, Mr. Chairman, honourable members, ladies and gentlemen.
Thank you very much for the opportunity to speak to you today.
I would like to take the opportunity to share with you the perspective of a new sector council. We are just ten months old.
The electricity and renewable energy industry is part of Canada's critical infrastructure. It supports all industries and the well-being of every Canadian. As is said in the industry, we are all connected in the grid.
However, the industry is facing significant challenges because of an aging workforce. Within the next eight years, 40% of Canada's electricity workforce is anticipated to retire. Based on historical retirement patterns, we expect 30% to leave the industry. This reflects the many boomers who are in the industry, as they are in most of our Canadian industries.
We are going to face extensive competition from our colleagues, in all aspects of the labour force, for new employees. Due to the cost restraints of the nineties, Canada has not hired significantly, and it has not sustained sufficient junior replacement positions for the number of retiring electricity and renewable energy workers.
Equally significant is that advances in technology are changing the skills profile of employees and the workforce is growing with infrastructure replacement and expansion. By 2020, we anticipate the equivalent of a third of Canada's current installed capacity in the electricity business will need to be replaced or built new. At the same time that we are losing a significant number of knowledge workers from our industry, we are facing a huge amount of infrastructure refurbishment, replacement, and new build.
The industry is found in all regions and jurisdictions of Canada, in large and small communities, and in rural and urban environments. Workers for the industry are highly skilled and well supported by industry training programs. The electricity industry in Canada invests six times the national average in every worker. The majority of positions require post-secondary education and professional, trade, technical, or engineering certification.
Across Canada, the industry has a varied corporate structure. In some provinces, there is a holding by the province; in others there is a mix of governmental ownership, both provincial and municipal; and in some provinces, it is fully privatized. The majority of the industry is subject to rate regulation and consequently a highly controlled revenue stream. Canada has some of the lowest electricity rates in the world.
Regulatory authorities can define the areas where firms undertake operations and the nature of their investment in human infrastructure. Regulators that have the best of intentions to control consumer power costs often constrain the efforts of the industry to address the pending workforce retirements. They treat workforce development as a cost centre, as opposed to an infrastructure.
Other countries are facing similar aging workforce profiles. We are going to be extremely challenged as an industry and a business to develop new talent for our industry.
Consequently, our industry members, Electro-Federation, the Electricity Association, the Nuclear Association, and various renewable energy organizations, together with our four largest unions, CUPE, IBEW, the Power Workers, and the Society of Energy Professionals, gathered together in 2005 to respond to the results of a 2004 study supported by the Government of Canada, which provided the data I gave you, to create an electricity sector council.
Our industry used the sector council program as a significant initiative to support workforce development. We are extremely pleased to be supported in this way by the Government of Canada. We bring focus to workforce initiatives as sector councils, and we represent, in a non-partisan fashion, all key stakeholders. Our boards include educators, labour organizations, industry members, as well as regulatory authorities for occupational standards and related stakeholders.
With me today is board member Norm Fraser. Norm will share the industry perspective with you.
Good morning, everybody. My name is Mr. Norm Fraser. I'm the vice-president of operations at Hydro Ottawa. This is the local distribution company that supplies the city of Ottawa. In simpler terms, I'm the guy you call when the lights go out.
I'm here to talk about what electricity means to us in the industry and to the public.
If you think about your electricity bill, it arrives once every two months or so, or every month. You pay it and you don't think about it too much. You flick the switch on your wall and things happen.
You're not asking for more electricity, you're asking for the services that electricity provides: your washing machine, lighting, electronics, telephones, furnace, air conditioning, security systems--practically everything we can see.
The job of my business, the electricity business, is straightforward: generate and deliver the product reliably and cost-effectively. In Canada, we are world leaders. All Canadians enjoy the comforts and economic benefits associated with one of the most reliable and cost-effective electricity networks in the world. The measure of my success in our industry is when people don't think about it. They take it for granted; iIt's always there and it's a reasonable cost.
Now try to imagine a world in which the electricity production and delivery system isn't as reliable, or is maybe unavailable for long periods of time. Remember August 2003, and then think about the debate in Ontario in the last few years over the security of the electricity supply.
Simply, without electricity our society, as we have built it over the last four generations, would come to a halt. All our industries rely heavily on safe, secure, and affordable electricity: telecommunications, manufacturing, agriculture, banking, petrochemicals, transportation, etc. This is why we have this council.
There are thousands of highly skilled Canadians running your electricity business. They are engineers, line maintainers, transmission operators, electricians, etc. They work in generating stations, transmission companies, and distribution utilities.
They will be retiring en masse in very short order, and we have to move quickly to sustain this talent pool.
In closing, I would ask you to remember that almost all sectors in Canada are facing a similar demographic challenge, but unless we deal with electricity as a fundamental underpinning of our economy, we might as well not bother to address the others. They will not thrive in a global economy with a floundering electricity network, regardless of how robust their workforce is or how competitive they try to be.
This is why I eagerly agreed to sit on this board. I've worked in this business my whole adult life; my demographic may be part of the problem, but I'm going to work hard to make sure that I'm part of the solution.
Thank you very much.
Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman, distinguished members of the committee, and ladies and gentlemen, for the opportunity to share in your examination of employability issues in Canada.
[Translation]
My name is Colette Rivet and I am Executive Director of the Biotechnology Human Resource Council.
[English]
Biotechnology is comprised of such core technologies as RNA/DNA applications, cell and tissue culture and engineering, nano-biotechnology and subcellular processes. It involves such sub-sectors as human health, agriculture, food processing, natural resources, environment, aquaculture, bioinformatics, and of course bio-energy.
Biotechnology also encompasses such areas as life sciences, pharmaceuticals and medical devices, all sharing specific biotechnology competencies within a unique global environment.
The full achievement of the potential benefits of biotechnology depends on the industry's ability to manage its human resource challenges. A more strategic and national approach to the human resource challenges facing the industry is critical to ensure the long-term growth and sustainability of the sector.
In addition to driving demands in human health and the other sub-sectors, current trends driving demand for bio-products include concerns for the environment, greenhouse gas reduction, and the cost and availability of petroleum. New products promise to deliver added value at the farm gate, while at the same time providing products that lessen the impact on our environment.
Agriculture and forestry will form the basis for the creation of a new industry based on renewable carbon and a new and prosperous Canada.
However, rapid commercial and technological progress is stressing the industry's human resources capacity. Overall, Canadian-based biotechnology companies have global niche opportunities, but at the same time these firms face unique business challenges because they are highly regulated, research and development intensive, and many have long product development times with high-risk product failure.
Most are small enterprises and many of these have uncertain futures because of limited access to financing. So as a result of this limited long-term financing and minimal staff per company there has been little focus and funds available for human resources and the skill issues. Competition is also intense due to the highly specialized international nature of this industry.
The biotechnology industry has a wide range of skill requirements, including entry level and senior researchers, as well as experts in areas such as intellectual property, quality assurance, informatics, and marketing. The development of emerging technologies requires new skills, often immediately.
As companies move through their life cycle they require new technical management and leadership skills that are not needed at earlier stages. Similarly, as products move to commercialization, skills are needed in companies and public sector bodies in areas such as regulatory affairs and legal affairs.
The many players and stakeholders in Canada in the Canadian biotechnology industry vary in size, location, the sub-sector in which they operate, and the stage of development, while sharing the specific competencies that are required.
The shortage of qualified people is impacting the growth of Canadian biotechnology. The sector is now beginning to realize how acute this is, and people like venture capitalists and junior scientists and administrative managers are realizing that they need to understand how the biotechnology industry is different from the industries they are used to dealing with.
Biotechnology Human Resource Council's objective is to ensure that qualified, skilled, and experienced people are available to fill the jobs in the industry and can contribute to the development of a more competitive sector. As a non-profit and national organization it works with industry, researchers, educators, governments, and employees to meet this goal. BHRC has a critical leadership and coordination role in working with industry stakeholders.
Our first recommendation is that we believe the Government of Canada's role should be to support a stepped-up partnership approach between the government and sector councils to address and implement labour market solutions.
As a sector council, BHRC has a strong advantage in successfully leading a national human resource strategy for the biotechnology industry, since BHRC's membership is of the industry, and industry buy-in will be critical to achieving strategy. BHRC has a national mandate and is pursuing a less fragmented approach than is currently the situation, partnering with provincial and territorial governments and regional organizations to complement and build upon initiatives and reduce duplication of efforts. Also, there are many private, public, and non-profit organizations across the country that are involved in education, credentialing, and/or training within the biotechnology sector, and BHRC remains objective and inclusive to all potential partners, while leading the recognition process of those that enable the job readiness of workers. And BHRC is pursuing a strategic and systemic approach that will build sustainability for the work accomplished within the biotechnology sector.
The second recommendation is related to competencies and training. The rate of scientific advancement globally and both the emergence of new technologies and convergence of existing technologies translates to the need for human resources with interdisciplinary training and an ability to remain flexible in a rapidly evolving environment. This interdisciplinary training is the major gap in scientific and technical programming today. In addition to the need for programs that converge scientific disciplines and provide more hands-on training to increase their relevance to industry needs, areas such as intellectual property, regulatory affairs, and commercialization need to be integrated to help students to understand the industry beyond the research and discovery stages.
Companies will stress the importance of continuous learning and future concerns regarding the ability of staff to adapt to changing business environments. A number will suggest that if individuals can demonstrate specific competencies, they can be brought on board and trained in required technologies and skills.
So the second recommendation we provided you is to facilitate the setting of national skill and occupational standards, which will assist with integration and help coordinate the needs of employers, as well as the development of a national qualification framework, including Canadian credentialing and certification systems, which will assist with foreign credential recognition.
Thank you very much for your time.
Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. Thank you for that introduction.
The National Seafood Sector Council provides viable solutions to human resource and labour challenges in the seafood processing industry. Numerous industry enterprises, associations, institutes, and related organizations hold membership within our council. The NSSC is a national service provider for training and learning products geared towards the seafood processing industry, and as a national leader, we approach the consultations on employability in Canada with great enthusiasm.
[Translation]
The National Seafood Sector Council, or NSSC, is a non-profit organization which takes its lead from industry. The NSSC was Established in 1995, the NSSC is committed to developing human resources strategies and programs targeting the entire seafood processing industry. It is a unique partnership comprised of employers, employees, unions, associations, regulatory organizations and private sector trainers, who are working together towards a common goal: a dynamic and prosperous seafood processing industry built by a well-trained and productive workforce.
[English]
The Canadian seafood processing sector is a vibrant industry and has a worldwide reputation for high-quality fish products. Approximately 35,000 workers make up this workforce, with 100 registered processing operations across the country, according to DFO.
The seafood industry accounts for 20% of total food products, with over 85% of its products and seafood production sold to over 130 countries worldwide. As the world's fifth-largest exporter of fish and seafood products, the industry contributes $4.3 billion to the Canadian economy. Lobster and crab are the country's most valuable exports. In terms of volume, it is herring and shrimp.
The seafood industry accounts for 15% of the total manufacturing workforce in Canada.
I give you all this background to show how viable our industry still is in Canada today. For the past 11 years, we have been at the forefront of Canadian seafood processors in addressing their human resource needs. The experience of our council, coupled with industry expertise, has given us great opportunity to meet the industry demands of the sector, in both a timely and effective manner.
We first developed a quality management program when the Canadian Food Inspection Agency revised its regulations. We were first off the mark, and the country was trained on that basis. We do a lot of work in food safety, which of course is a big issue in today's world. In particular, we have many tools in sanitation and hygiene.
After 9/11, bioterrorism became a critical issue with many sectors and companies that export to the U.S. It was especially important that we were able to respond and developed some training tools to enable the industry to move forward and get their products across the border.
We are also well connected. We have a regional presence in seven provinces across the country. Having someone on the ground at the forefront with industry allows us to create numerous linkages and partnerships on a yearly basis with education, NGOs, various levels of government, associations, and community groups. We have a plethora of products and services in both official languages. We have over 40 tools and services, and I do have a few samples here.
The seafood processing industry, like many others, is facing labour shortages. There are workers who are aging and preparing to exit the workforce. Not enough workers are pursuing careers in this sector at a sufficient rate to replace the aging workers, and employers in the seafood processing industry are struggling to find skilled workers.
Two areas have impacted the industry's competitiveness, and they are skilled worker shortages and the need for a national worker mobility program.
:
I'll talk a bit on the skilled worker shortages. My name is Phil LeBlanc. I am the president of IMO Foods, which is a private label seafood processing company located in Nova Scotia.
As we heard, everybody has labour shortages coming up or expected, and the seafood industry is in the same position as everyone else.
In an increasingly competitive global marketplace, Canadian seafood processors have to find niche markets if we're going to be successful in our business. At the same time, we need to retain the skilled workers other people are looking for and keep them in our industry by providing them a stable and steady place of employment.
There is a need now for a rebalancing of interests brought about by these market-driven changes affecting our industry. The approach we're recommending is that processors develop a model through a national forum on fisheries to conduct and engage seafood processors, the fish harvesters, and the Department of Fisheries and Oceans in a dialogue that addresses the management of the fishery.
Ideally these groups would collaborate and share information and resources to reach a consensus concerning the management of the fishery, in terms of opening and closing dates and other things that affect everybody in a common way. The overall prosperity of the seafood processing industry can be expected to improve if we do this.
The recommendation on skilled workers is that the government provide assistance in the development of a national model to facilitate a dialogue of DFO, fish harvesters, and the processing sector to help in the management of the fishery in a collaborative way.
We'll get back to worker mobility for another minute.
There has been much discussion and debate recently on the topic of bringing in foreign workers to meet the shortages of the Canadian labour market; yet more efforts should be made to maximize and effectively utilize the Canadian labour pool.
Our approach is to seek a way to increase labour mobility within Canada with relative ease for our workers. Any framework of labour mobility, of course, should include minimum standards governing recognition of skills, training, and knowledge. There are currently federal and provincial labour mobility programs available to assist employers and employees, but they exist largely for the regulated occupations, professions, and trades.
What the NSSC is seeking would be a non-regulated, sectoral approach to assist inter- and intra-provincial mobility. The essence of the program would provide some financial assistance to relocate, and a framework or measure of social support to assist workers in their new locale.
While there are seasonal foreign worker programs that could also assist in addressing these labour shortages, there is a desire on the part of the Canadian industry, and that includes labour unions, to offer employment opportunities to Canadians first and foremost. With the appropriate mechanism, our council believes, this can be achieved.
Optimally, the development of a program to assist workers to move to other areas would enable all these support mechanisms.
Immobility in the seafood industry is particularly important, as the seasons for employment can be short. Broader food-processing seasons can be linked together to extend the period of seasonal employment. This would allow fish workers to engage in employment opportunities in other areas.
A number of the skills are transferable, especially in the areas of quality control sets. There must be at least some incentive, however, to assist the workers to move to other locations. The Province of New Brunswick is working with fish processing employees to provide a measure of support to facilitate employment in other seasonal industries that complement the crab season, for example particularly in blueberry and potato processing.
Given the limits of time, I'll cut back on further descriptions, but I would like to get through the recommendations, if I may.
The first one is that government should provide integration assistance for workers moving from one location to another within Canada. It's similar in concept to the provincial program at the local level.
Incentives should be made available to promote worker mobility.
The third one is to provide assistance and programs for non-regulated professions, in addition to the current emphasis on the regulated professions or occupations.
Our final recommendation is to create a dialogue between the various levels of government—including provinces—and employers to facilitate mobility.
Thank you very much.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Hon. members, ladies and gentlemen, I am very pleased to speak to you today on behalf of the artists and cultural workers in Canada, as executive director of the Cultural Human Resources Council—that's CHRC.
I'll just point out that Jennifer actually has a very good acronym with “CARS”. We affectionately call ours “CHURCH” from time to time, but I'm not just sure how appropriate that one is.
In the cultural sector, our issue is not so much labour shortages, as several of my colleagues have pointed out; it's more an issue of providing training to cultural workers in a world that is fast-changing. We are very affected by globalization and by new technologies, and that's really where our challenge is. It's not in recruiting members to our sector; it's more in getting the stars out of their eyes, as we like to say. Young people do come to the cultural sector, but the challenges once they're there are quite significant, and they have to be committed.
[Translation]
I would like to begin by providing you with an overview of the sector so that you are able to get a sense of its size. It includes more than half a million cultural workers, in other words, artists, creators, actors, producers, distributors and archivers.
It also includes several subsectors. For example, stage performers, which includes musicians, dancers, actors, visual artists and crafts persons.
The sector also includes the cultural industries. These have a major impact on the economy as they are worth $33 billion. In our jargon, the cultural industries include publishing, sound recording, audio-visual—film and television—and new media.
Heritage is another large subsector which includes libraries, archives, heritage buildings and museums.
Our sector is characterized by a large number of self-employed workers who, for the most part, have an income which is modest and constantly fluctuating; they go through rough times and good.
That is a brief overview of the sector.
[English]
The Cultural Human Resources Council has acted as a sector council for over ten years now for this sector. We've been involved in developing career management tools, internship support, labour market research, strategic planning, etc.
To give you a sense of some of the issues that we address with the cultural workers, with the sector, we develop competency charts and profiles. These are done to provide a sense of what the skills needs are in an occupation. They can be used for curriculum developers to develop curriculum in schools, colleges, or universities; they can be used by self-employed workers to assess their own skills; they can be used by employers to write job descriptions, etc.
These charts and profiles have had a very big impact on the sector. An example is in the area of new media three years ago. There's an absolutely booming business now. The creators--we called them basement dwellers--didn't really talk to each other, but they were in front of their computer screens doing wonderful things. By bringing forward the process of developing a competency chart and profile for new media content creators, we brought that community together and gave them a voice and a profile. This multi-billion-dollar industry--which is led by the gaming industry, of course--is being well served by these people, so we were able to make a connection between the artists and the industry in that case.
The self-employment issue is the big feature of the sector that we are having to deal with. As many as 39% of the cultural labour force describe themselves as self-employed; however, a significant number of these pursue secondary employment to earn a living wage. For example, a writer or visual artist may be self-employed for the purposes of creating and selling their work, while at the same time that person may function as an employee teaching at a college, university, or school.
The separation of each distinctive source of income has proven to be challenging when dealing with issues like the ownership of intellectual property, copyright, taxation, and access to social benefits. It is this blend of employment and self-employment combined with low and fluctuating incomes that sets the cultural sector apart from the rest of the Canadian workforce, and that has provided the basis for the three main recommendations that we make to you today. As I make them, I invite you to consider the fact that these will affect Canadians outside the cultural workforce as well. It's been pointed out to me that there is an opposition day in Parliament, I believe, addressing issues around older workers; as I read through these, I'd like you to think about how this would affect the broader workforce as well.
Our first recommendation has to do with social benefits. We're asking the government to consider extending social benefits, including employment insurance, to the self-employed.
One of the most difficult employability issues faced by artists and cultural workers who are self-employed is that in addition to having low and fluctuating incomes, they don't have a social safety net to support them. This includes the access to compassionate leave, parental leave, and sick leave that is enjoyed by most Canadians, as well as access to training programs and, of course, employment insurance.
The second recommendation we would ask you consider is the importance of training and professional development in the sector. We ask that the government continue to support initiatives that, while recognizing provincial jurisdiction for training, take a national approach to training in our sector. That national approach is what sector councils provide, and we feel we fulfill a very important role there.
Third, we ask that you support mentorship programs that are not age-restricted to facilitate career development in succession. It is in this area that we're starting to address the older part of the workforce. The federal government has been very supportive with youth internships, as well as addressing the issue of school dropout, etc., and that bridge between school and work. We're seeing that there is also a very big issue that's being addressed by older workers; if we could extend those youth internship programs to include other ages, you would be able to address succession issues and career transfer issues, transition issues, for older workers as well.
Those are our three major recommendations. I thank you for your time and attention.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman. Certainly seven minutes is not enough, as we all understand, nor is the time we have today, because there are many questions.
By the way, I had the pleasure of visiting Mr. LeBlanc's plant, IMO Foods in Yarmouth, and it's nice to welcome all of you here, but it's particularly nice to see you here.
One of the things that strikes me as I listen to this evidence is that we Canadians haven't really appreciated the impact the demographic change we're seeing is going to have on our economy and our society. I'd like you to talk for a moment about your own industry and what you think it will mean in the next five years. For example, will it mean that as you have to pay more and more for your employees and have more trouble getting them, it will price you out of some markets? Will it mean people are going to be working in other fields, and there will be less activity in certain industries?
It seems to me we haven't recognized what a dramatic shift we're facing, because for the first time in our lifetime, instead of having a situation where there aren't enough jobs, we'll have a situation where more and more there aren't enough employees. I would like your comments on that very broad question.
I think your question is well founded, but what we're talking about is having to address the issues of skill shortages and families actually having to make a living, even if it's not in optimum conditions. Perhaps what we're talking about when we talk about worker mobility is not on a grand scale but in particular regions for particular periods of time. Workers have to live just like anyone else, and need employment opportunities with mechanisms in place that would provide a measure of support to make that transition easier. People do it now. It's happening across the country, not in grand numbers, but it is happening.
A new board member of ours is from Winnipeg. There is the Freshwater Fish Marketing Corporation there, quite a large operation, right in downtown Winnipeg almost, and they have a tremendous shortage of workers. They have a sign outside advertising--that's how critical it is. I know in P.E.I. Russian seasonal workers are brought in to assist companies there. There used to be a lot of migration from Newfoundland to P.E.I. for three, four, or five months to cover off the seasons.
I agree with you that perhaps this is not an ideal solution, but there have to be some mechanisms in place to assist these people who are going to have to make that move for economic reasons.
I want to shift for a moment. There's lots of talk out there today about using foreign-trained everything. We have people in the country who are doing things that don't match their expertise or their experience. But in my experience, we also have people in the country who actually want to work, and they are, if not skilled and trained, certainly motivated. The problem, though, is putting it together.
I know lots of young people in my own community who hear about something down the road. You talk about Jennifer needing 39,800 workers and the supply is only 24,000. In my experience, there are lots of people out there who want to work, but we don't seem to be able to put it together. I know there are sector councils and I know there have been reports made and recommendations made, but we're still not able to make that connection, to put the plug in the wall, so to speak.
I was out in B.C. a couple of weeks ago looking at the issue of poverty and recognizing a growing number of people who really do want to work, but for some reason or another, it just hasn't happened for them. They told me that at one point, at one shelter, companies used to come and give them a list of people they needed to do certain things. The shelter would provide them with the boots, the hard hat, and everything, and would ship them out. They'd be gone for a day, or two, or three, and work and come back. But it doesn't happen anymore. What's happening there actually is that they're bringing in offshore workers to work for $3 and $4 an hour, so the local folks aren't getting the jobs.
There may be jobs in other places, perhaps in the fishing industry in New Brunswick or Nova Scotia, but how do you get them from B.C. to New Brunswick to do that? That's my first question.
I know there are people out there. I run into them. I talk to them. I see them. They hear about these jobs that are supposedly available. One young fellow from my own community went and took a tool and die course, thinking and hearing that there was all kinds of need for that. He can't find a job.
:
Our industry does need those people who are motivated and want to work, no question. For us, as far as looking at the foreign worker is concerned, only about 400 people a year are coming in and saying they're automotive service technicians. It's a very small pool. So we do need to access those people who want to get into the industry.
The key there, I think, from our experience, is essential skills levels. People may have the desire to work in the industry, and for key occupations for our industry, they do need to go through the apprenticeship system, but having foundational skills in reading, numeracy, and document use, and thinking skills are key for people to get into our industry and succeed. They need those foundational skills just to get in, but once they're there, the rate of technological change is just absolutely astounding.
I know for the professional development training that we do, advanced electronics is a huge part of that and there is a huge demand by the employers. A lot of their employees who have been working in the industry five, ten, or fifteen years are having a hard time learning and understanding these advanced concepts, because they can't read a wiring diagram. Somehow they've gotten through, they're into the workplace, they've made it for so long, working in the capacity they're in, but with these advanced technologies that are coming in, they just can't keep up with it. So those foundational skills are so incredibly important for people to have, coming in.
Absolutely we want and need motivated workers, but as a way to provide these people, to set them up for success by giving them the level of skills that they need to have for specific industry occupations, we really need to partner with the education community and the apprenticeship community to ensure that we are setting up these young people or transitional workers for success.
:
I'd like to echo the remarks of my esteemed colleagues, but also, like Susan, come at it in a bit of a different perspective.
I think one of the challenges that industry is facing is the change in our whole technology platform. The way we looked at work when the baby boomers came into the workforce is very different from the way it is now. The need for science- and technology-driven positions has been estimated by a study in the United States to have increased five times faster than the population change or the labour force change. We can't graduate enough people right now to meet the needs of the business.
If you're looking at an industry such as electricity—highly regulated, with important safety considerations—it's extremely important for us to deal with regulated professions and certifications. What it takes for a worker to achieve a position in our business quite often is a significant level of training. For a nuclear operator, from the point they start community college to the point they're actually considered able to sustain a shift solely on their own is ten years. We are very challenged in that context, because we are trying to protect public safety to maintain extremely technical complex equipment and we require very knowledgeable people.
Our industry, as it gets more computerized, is going to face this problem more and more. The time and support it takes to transition a worker who, as Jennifer says, is lacking essential skills is significant, and the dollar investment is significant. It would be very challenging for an individual employer to do but is certainly an important role for government.
:
That would be my pleasure.
You're right, most of the biotechnology that you hear about is an individual in a research lab with a great discovery who takes off and forms a company, and all of a sudden he is faced with human resource things, soft skills, and has to organize it and talk to people. It's very difficult. They have to find money to get their products.
To get a product into commercialization can take 25 or 30 years, and you have to cross the valley of death, they call it, where there is nobody who wants to give you any financing and if you don't get that financing you're going to die. Your company will die.
What we're looking at is that even when you have a master's or a PhD, you have skills and competencies that you absolutely require to be successful in a sector. What we're looking at is finding ways for foreign immigrants as well as Canadians, people transitioning, new entrants of any type, to develop those competencies and to identify them for them so they can get them on the job and get the training they require. What we're trying to do is develop the competencies and the career profiles so people can understand what that means. We can transition it from different professions and make them workable. What we need is a certification process led by industry so that they will buy into it and say if someone has been certified and has those competencies, they won't feel there is a risk. They'll say that's great, you're in, and they keep going.
On top of that, we have all these emerging technologies that are coming about and we have to train them immediately again. It is always an ongoing thing. We're never going to be stopping learning. The industry realizes this, and they feel that the competency kind of approach and a practical assessment when you can't prove it any other way, which deals with immigrants as well, is a way of getting them in there and working productively for Canada.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chair. I would like to thank our witnesses for appearing before us this morning.
It been most edifying and extremely fascinating to hear what you have to say about the problems relating to your specific industries. It fascinates me to think that over the past 20 years, we have been able, as human beings, to adapt, to create, to invent, to understand and to assimilate new technologies across many fields, including computers, while simultaneously, we have lacked the necessary long-term vision required to see that our labour force is aging. This does fascinate me given that if today these 50, 55 or 60 year olds were already professionals 20 years ago, it should have been obvious that they were going to get older, especially since unions negotiated collective agreements to get pension plans for workers so that they would stop working at 56 years of age.
So I am surprised to see us in today's situation. It is also very upsetting because I have not heard any of you refer to a greater female presence in the labour force, and the need to get more women on board to meet needs and to fill positions such as power line riggers or, in the auto sector, mechanics, small engine mechanics, and so on. The same applies to the biotechnology sector, although I believe there are a few more women in working in that sector, and I am very glad about that.
On the one hand we want a renewed labour market and yet on the other hand we seem to be relying on old methods to find this labour force.
My question is directed to Ms. Steeves and especially to Ms. Cottingham, as you both work in areas where I think the possibility of achieving greater female representation is most real, and yet your remarks did not reflect this.
:
I would say that the industry has tried very hard. We have a couple of challenges there.
We rely on the educational institutions and their diversity profiles to support us. One of the things that I said to the deans of engineering in Canada when I spoke to them was that they have to do a better job so that we can do a better job. This is true for all equity communities; we are very challenged in that capacity.
In regard to the trades, in our iconic trade, the power line workers, we have had some success in some provinces with women. Our challenge is retention. It's a job that has shifts; you go up poles in rotten weather, and when people develop a family life, it's not as compatible as they would like, so women come, but they don't say. I'm not sure that there's an easy way to address that.
It would be fair to say that we are very conscious that we need to improve our equity profile. We have a community of challenges there. One is with our educational providers--we need them to support us and we need them to have strong equity initiatives--but likewise we need to think about how we organize our work. Are there things that we can do differently?
Indeed, as a new council, we are presenting our slate to the Government of Canada for financial support; power line workers and equity improvement make up one of those areas.
:
We've been working with the educational community, but certainly a lot more work needs to be done there, so that careers in our industry are presented to young women and young men as being viable, excellent careers for them. Less than 3%, I think it is, of our industry is female.
It is slow to change, for sure, but I think for the education community this is the importance of career information and partnerships with industry and various levels of government: to ensure that young people realize a connection between what they're learning in school and all the different career paths it could lead to.
Right now we struggle with the educational community's having a 30-year-old view of what it takes to work in some industries. I'm sure other industries find the same thing.
It is really about educating the education community and having the resources to do it. Being a national sector council, we certainly try to do that working on a national basis, but are trying to work with the school boards. We are working with the Toronto district school board on a pilot project to try to address those various issues: essential skills, and that there are various careers in the industry for young ladies.
The young ladies who do come in, I've heard, do very well. I know from the college instructors that a lot of young women will come in and start as automotive service technicians, but as they learn about the breadth of the industry they gravitate to the parts side of things or to service adviser, where they are using people skills. They are very good at those sorts of occupations. A lot of dealerships are putting women in those service adviser positions now, because it is women who are very often dropping off the family vehicle, so there is a comfort level there.
How much of this disjoint is from not paying people enough? In my community I have people coming in and saying, we can't get workers because now we have this big call centre industry that's developed and we can't get people in here.
My first thought—I don't always articulate it—is that if you pay them more, you'll probably get them back, because what you're offering is actually a better workplace environment, in those terms. I often wonder whether, in the old marketplace that we often hold up as the “hidden hand” of the force out there, sometimes getting people into your industry is a factor of how much you pay them. If it is a highly paid job, they'll do the education and training and will come and work for you.
I was in New Brunswick talking about child care and was shocked to discover that there were lots of people moving into child care, but as soon as they got an opportunity to work at a call centre, which was paying $10 or $12 an hour, they were moving to the call centre out of child care, which in my view would have been a much more satisfying career, perhaps.
But that is not the question I wanted to ask. I want to ask Susan this in terms of her sector. What is the impact of the cuts to the volunteer and non-profit sector and the total demolishing of the social economy initiative? What's that going to do to your sector?
:
Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Thank you all for appearing before the committee today.
I am going to start with some observations. One of the things mentioned earlier is the fact that regions in this country are becoming more urban than rural and there is a problem with employment. Let us go back in time. Before going into politics, I was in economic development. When you work in economic development, you take into account the diversity of your suppliers, clients, and markets.
In some of the more rural regions of the country, there are people who appreciate the quality of life and the environment they live in. In certain cases, they are often forced to go away to study, but they would also like to be in a position to go back home.
Have the various organizations or sectors that you represent thought about the fact that the workers that you so desperately need might like to be able to go back home to where they were born, to work, which would create for your a permanent pool of people who could work in your sectors?
It is not because people work in a rural environment — my riding is rural — that they are uneducated. In reality, in my riding, in Northern New Brunswick, there are two community colleges and a university. Partnerships between industry and these teaching institutions can easily solve the training problems for industry, regardless of what industry we are talking about.
At the same time, instead of always sending employees or individuals to other regions, have the companies that you represent considered doing the opposite? There would be no training problems. People would be stable, because they are in the community they want to return to. Even people who go to work in other provinces say so. They would like to go back to their own region. That would represent incredible stability for the various industries. I understand that it would be more difficult for some industries, but in most cases, it is possible.
My riding has a seaport, a railway, roads, and airports. What more do you need when you have people, knowledge, and infrastructure? I would like to hear your reactions to that.
:
As for the automotive repair and service sector, those folks are everywhere, rural and urban. Everybody has a vehicle. They all need to be repaired at some point or another.
The New Brunswick community college in Bathurst is one of our accredited programs. They offer excellent automotive repair training and collision.
The challenge for our industry is to release people to go to training to upgrade their skills. If you're in a rural location, it's not just the cost of training. It's the downtime, the loss of productivity while that person or two people are away on training, if they have to go to Moncton or to Bathurst, for example. So what we came up with was our interactive distance learning, and that has worked very well.
The way it works is that a shop has a satellite dish and a television set in their lunch room or some common area in the shop, and we broadcast upgrade training--not apprenticeship training but upgrade training once they're in the workforce--so they can keep their skills updated.
That has worked very well, especially for rural communities, because it is such a challenge to keep their skills updated, and if they don't, their employability is greatly diminished, especially in our industry. So ways to bring training into the workplace are very key for our industries, and probably for others.
If you look at a corporation like Canadian Tire, they have stores everywhere across Canada and certainly need to attain training.
So there's interactive distance learning, distance training. We're now looking into e-learning, what the industry's capacity would be to receive training in that format.
Ensuring that people's skills are upgraded and keeping them employable is key, but they're certainly employable in these rural communities.
:
Thank you very much. That's all the time we have for that question.
I just want to ask a quick question. I know we talk about training, and training, and training. I realize that the federal government does offer some incentives, but I also realize that employers are in that boat as well.
What are your thought processes on employers? Should employers be stepping up to the plate for skill training, and are they? Obviously they are, probably at various levels, at various times. Is there more need for employers to be stepping up? That's the first part of the question.
Secondly, is there a way a government could encourage them to do that? I think I know the answer to that, but what kinds of things can we as a government do to encourage more of that?
I don't know who wants to take a stab at that first. Go ahead, Ms. Rivet.