Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Prime Minister Announces Advisory Committee Aimed At Promoting Skilled Trades

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Aug, 2019 08:32 PM

    HALIFAX - A new advisory committee will help promote apprenticeships and skilled trades across Canada, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Friday.

     

    Trudeau made the announcement prior to a roundtable meeting focused on promoting trades for women at a Nova Scotia Community College campus in Dartmouth, N.S.

     

    In brief opening remarks before the closed-door session, Trudeau said trades should be seen as a viable option at a time when there's "a lot of uncertainty" about where the jobs of the future will come from.

     

    "We know that trades are a great career that offers professional development, continued advancement, and a level of satisfaction that is remarkable," he said.

     

    The Liberal government announced $6 million over two years in the 2019 budget to create a national campaign to promote skilled trades to young people.

     

    However, Trudeau acknowledged that breaking into trades isn't an easy proposition for many in the job market.

     

    "There can be challenges for certain people to get into trades, particularly minority groups, or women, or marginalized communities. That's why talking about how important trades are is important . . . for everyone."

     

    The advisory committee is to lay the groundwork for a national campaign to encourage apprenticeships and promote the skilled trades as a career. It will lead consultations, explore partnerships, and provide advice to the minister of employment, workforce development and labour.

     

    Members named to the committee so far are the three co-chairs Mandy Rennehan, founder and CEO of Freshco, Jamie McMillan, ironworker and founder of Kickass Careers, and Matt Wayland, executive assistant with the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers. More members are to be named later.

     

    According to the federal government Canada will need 67,000 new journeypersons to sustain the country's workforce in the 10 largest standardized trades by 2023.

     

    However, the number of young women in particular who are considering a career as a skilled tradesperson, continues to be low. The government points to an OECD survey that found only two per cent of 15-year-old female students were planning to pursue a career in the skilled trades.

     

    Rennehan, said it's a trend that has to change given that women represent just four per cent of the skilled trades workforce.

     

    "Everybody needs to understand that four per cent needs to shoot to 40 per cent, and then we will be the front-runner in the world," she said.

     

    Emily Boucher, of the Nova Scotia-based non-profit group Techsploration, said her group has been working through a mentoring program to introduce girls in Grades 9 through 12 to in-demand careers in science, engineering, trades and technology since 1998.

     

    Boucher said nearly one-fifth of the program's graduates have found careers in construction trades.

     

    She said there has been a "significant shift" over the past five to 10 years in how employers in the trades have come to see women as a potential source of labour.

     

    Boucher welcomed the renewed emphasis by the federal and provincial governments on promoting the trades and women's place in them. "A diverse workforce is a more productive workforce, so it directly impacts innovation and bottom line in Canada," she said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    EDC Expresses Regret For Us$41m Loan To Back Bombardier Sale To Zuma Allies

    EDC Expresses Regret For Us$41m Loan To Back Bombardier Sale To Zuma Allies
    Canada's export credit agency says it regrets a 2015 decision to lend US$41 million to a South African company owned by members of a family with ties to former president Jacob Zuma.

    EDC Expresses Regret For Us$41m Loan To Back Bombardier Sale To Zuma Allies

    Saint John Police Chief Says Oland Murder Investigation No Longer Active

    Police Chief Bruce Connell made the statement the day after New Brunswick's Public Prosecution Services announced they will not appeal Dennis Oland's acquittal.

    Saint John Police Chief Says Oland Murder Investigation No Longer Active

    Judge Finds Calgary Man Guilty In Grandson's Death

    Judge Finds Calgary Man Guilty In Grandson's Death
    Allan Perdomo Lopez was charged with manslaughter in the 2015 death of five-year-old Emilio Perdomo.

    Judge Finds Calgary Man Guilty In Grandson's Death

    Quebec Police Investigate Possible Hate Crime After Excrement Left On Storefront

    Quebec City police say they've opened an investigation into a possible hate crime after the owner of a clothing boutique that sells Islamic headscarves reported that someone had smeared feces on the front door of the shop.

    Quebec Police Investigate Possible Hate Crime After Excrement Left On Storefront

    Liberals Name Candidate In Wilson-Raybould's Riding

    The Liberals now have a candidate in the British Columbia riding of Vancouver Granville, where their biggest rival will be someone they once called their own.    

    Liberals Name Candidate In Wilson-Raybould's Riding

    Police In B.C. Bring Down Emu With Stun Gun

    Police In B.C. Bring Down Emu With Stun Gun
    Mounties in the Vancouver Island town of Chemainus say they had to resort to drastic measures in an effort to get an errant emu out of the way of highway traffic.

    Police In B.C. Bring Down Emu With Stun Gun