Close X
Sunday, September 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Scotiabank Tells Employees That Some Regional Processing Offices To Close

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Oct, 2015 12:07 PM
    TORONTO — Scotiabank is telling employees to get ready for certain offices across the country to close over the next two years as it digitizes a number of functions related to processing documents.
     
    The bank says it will open two new hubs in the Toronto area with more advanced technology to handle those tasks.
     
    Scotiabank (TSX:BNS) says it will be working with employees at affected offices in other Canadian cities — including Vancouver, Calgary, Winnipeg, Ottawa and Halifax — to try to find new jobs for them within the bank, where possible.
     
    It will "provide other assistance as necessary" to employees who can't be reassigned, spokeswoman Diane Flanagan said in a telephone interview.
     
    Flanagan was unable to specify how many roles will be affected and said the information meetings held on Thursday were just one stage of the preparations for making the changes.
     
    The affected operations were initially built to serve a branch network that operated mostly with paper, performing functions such as processing documents related to opening new accounts and fulfilling loans.
     
    "We really don't have a sense of what the job impacts are right now because, where possible, we're going to try and find other work for them," Flanagan said during a telephone interview Friday.
     
    Globalnews.ca reported that nearly 400 people in Calgary were told about the downsizing plan and CBC said it was contacted by a Scotiabank employee who estimated 200 people in her region could be affected.
     
    The bank says that by digitizing the documentation functions and consolidating those roles at the two new hubs, it will speed up processing and turnaround times for clients.
     
    "As much as there may be impacts in some areas, and we recognize that's very difficult for those employees, we are continuing to grow in other areas," said Flanagan, noting that the bank plans to hire new staff to work at its "digital factory," which will launch next year.
     
    The bank announced plans for the digital factory last week. The facility will house more than 350 tech jobs, including user experience designers and data scientists, as the bank strives to meet customers' evolving needs for digital services.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canadian Sikhs Blame Conversions, Drugs For Declining Population

    Canadian Sikhs Blame Conversions, Drugs For Declining Population
    Sikh leaders in North America blame conversions, drugs and migration for the decline in the growth rate of Sikh population in India from 1.9 percent to 1.7 percent as per the 2011 census.

    Canadian Sikhs Blame Conversions, Drugs For Declining Population

    Court Awards Montreal-Based Indo-Canadian Activist Jaggi Singh $15,000 For Unlawful Arrest

    Court Awards Montreal-Based Indo-Canadian Activist Jaggi Singh $15,000 For Unlawful Arrest
    Montreal-based activist Jaggi Singh had filed a lawsuit against officers Frederic Mercier and George Lamirande for arresting and detaining him during an International Women's Day rally in March 2007

    Court Awards Montreal-Based Indo-Canadian Activist Jaggi Singh $15,000 For Unlawful Arrest

    Rain Dampens B.C. Coast, But Wildfires Still A Concern In Southern Interior

    Rain Dampens B.C. Coast, But Wildfires Still A Concern In Southern Interior
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A cooler trend across British Columbia hasn't dramatically reduced the number of wildfires.  

    Rain Dampens B.C. Coast, But Wildfires Still A Concern In Southern Interior

    North Vancouver High School Teacher, 39, Charged With Sexual Assault, Suspended Without Pay

    North Vancouver High School Teacher, 39, Charged With Sexual Assault, Suspended Without Pay
    A 39-year-old high school teacher has been charged with sexually exploiting one of his female students in North Vancouver

    North Vancouver High School Teacher, 39, Charged With Sexual Assault, Suspended Without Pay

    Air Miles For Active B.C. Residents Before Program Goes National: B.C. Minister Terry Lake

    Health Minister Terry Lake confirms B.C. and the Public Health Agency of Canada will roll out a rewards program this fall.

    Air Miles For Active B.C. Residents Before Program Goes National: B.C. Minister Terry Lake

    Canada's 'Technical Recession' Will Be Short-Lived, Economists Say

    Economists say data out this week is likely to show that Canada slipped into a technical recession in the second quarter, but the contraction should be short-lived. 

    Canada's 'Technical Recession' Will Be Short-Lived, Economists Say