Thank you, Mr. Chair, and it's “chairman” because I'm a chair of another committee, not for any political reasons.
Anyway, I'm happy to be here today. I have just a couple of questions.
I'm in a different spot that Mr. Cullen is. I have a recent graduate. She did a co-op program at the University of Ottawa, a B.Com. She actually turned jobs down, to be honest with you. She has a job she doesn't like and is looking around still, but anyway, she's well paid.
What surprised me the most as a parent...and I wasn't one of the parents who said they only had to go to university. We tried to encourage them to do other things, but they're very focused young ladies. I have another one at school in the United States who pays $30,000 just for the pleasure of going there. I'm already at the $120,000....
The fact is that the cohort who she graduated with—a lot of them graduated last year, but because she was in co-op, she was longer—had no idea what jobs were actually available out there. They were somewhat lost, and they were all pretty smart young people.
One thing that I have done, as a member of Parliament—and I just started it, based on this—in my newsletter that I do every quarter is what industry is looking for people. I did health laboratories, for example. I did the marine industry, particularly on the Great Lakes. I know my friends across the way will be mad at me, but I did the nuclear industry because there are lots of jobs in the nuclear industry, and there are a variety of skill levels and educational requirements.
Is there something that the government could be doing, since we're not hearing it from parents and we're not hearing it from high schools, and so on, to be better promoting what industries have potential for jobs? I have a company in my town, Evertz Microsystems. They have job listings of opportunities that are as about as long as my arm. Now, they're all high-skilled tech jobs, but I talked to a young guy who got one of those jobs. He's 28 years old, and he's going around the world selling their equipment. Now, he has to be an engineer and he actually does some design work for them, too.
But my question is this. What are we doing wrong or what more could we do, as a government, to help promote where the opportunities are? Does anybody have an answer to that?
Yes, Brent. I was a student council leader, a University of Guelph president there, and we were part of CFS at the time, so there you go.