Yes.
Harold McBride is the executive director for our Operating Engineers Training Institute of Ontario, and he's also the manager of the Canadian Operating Engineers Joint Apprenticeship and Training Council, our national training organization.
We are a progressive and diversified trade union with over 45,000 members in Canada, primarily in the construction sector.
Our members operate the tower and mobile cranes, the bulldozers, the graders, the backhoes, and the piping equipment that help form and shape the infrastructure and skylines of Canada.
We provide the construction industry with highly skilled and highly technical tradespersons. To become a journeyperson in our sector you must train for thousands of hours, in both theory and practical training in the classroom as well as through on-the-job training. Because of the nature of our work, our training, and our skills, we are some of the best paid and highly sought after positions in the construction sector.
The development of these skills begins at one of our eight training facilities across Canada, where we provide rigorous, state-of-the-art training. Our facilities are registered within their particular province as well as with Human Resources Development Canada.
As stated by other witnesses, it's estimated that the construction sector will require 200,000 new skilled workers by 2018. However, the urgency for skilled trade workers in the construction sector is now.
I have a couple of examples.
By January 2013, our local in Alberta will need 1,000 operating engineers in support of the pipeline industry. In Ontario, we had a recent study commissioned that stated we need to train between 200 and 300 apprentices each year to replace retirees. We've tried to implement those numbers, but we are still facing a significant tower crane shortage. If you go downtown in Toronto and see all those cranes, and there are hundreds of them there, many of them sit empty for days on end because we don't have operators to fill them. The shortages are here and now.
We have a few suggestions that may help with the challenges we face in dealing with the shortages.
First, our training centres aren't able to meet the demand for heavy equipment/crane operators in Canada. If our training centres were able to access some additional support, through government support, either federally or provincially, it would allow us to expand our facilities and allow more Canadians to be trained. In the past there were funds like the knowledge infrastructure program, which our school in Ontario was actually able to access funds from, but it was the only school. Also in the past there was something called the Training Centre Infrastructure Fund, which allowed training centres to actually purchase equipment through a matching dollar fund with the federal government, and that was quite beneficial as well.
As well, as was touched on, there needs to be a better job done by all stakeholders to promote trades, particularly in the high schools. There is a lack of information or misinformation out there. When we go to many of these training fairs in trade careers, people look at us and say that our jobs are menial, low paying, and for the uneducated. That's far from the truth.
We also need to look at working with employers and government to maintain and encourage apprentices. There need to be better incentives to contractors who employ and maintain apprentices. Apprentices are usually the first to be let go from a job site, and once they're let go, many do not return, because of the long hours they must commit to the program. If they're unemployed, they have to find employment elsewhere and they do not come back. That's a big one.
There need to be changes to how Service Canada centres operate. For example, government retraining programs, such as Second Career Ontario, have policies in place that encourage clients to take their training locally at private schools, even though the training often will not lead to employment because of the limited amount of seat time that's provided. Guidelines discourage individuals from seeking the best training that will ensure employment in the trade of their choice. These private schools advertise training on four to five pieces of equipment and they charge up to $10,000. Only these schools benefit from this type of training because the trainees use up their EI and are not qualified or skilled enough to actually work in the construction sector.
Another problem we see with the EI system is that it needs to be opened up to allow laid-off workers to get retraining. The longer it takes an individual to access training, the more difficult it is financially. Because of the eligibility and suitability assessment template used in Ontario, as an example, an individual may not qualify for retraining until she or he has been unemployed for up to 26 weeks. If an individual is interested in training in a demand occupation, there needs to be a process that will enable them to access training sooner. More weight must be placed on the occupational demand rather that the length of unemployment.
Temporary foreign workers are not a solution. It's a stopgap measure. There are many challenges with the program on the construction side, including around the credentials of those coming to Canada.
We do support a long-term immigration policy, but we also must realize that Canada is competing worldwide with the same workers. I'll give Australia as an example. In western Australia they're facing similar booms and skill shortages. They have one program that brings people in for four years and they can work for multiple employers. That has apparently been quite a success, from what we've been told by others.
Finally, and most important, we need to look at developing made-in-Canada solutions by tapping into the female workforce and the youth of first nations, Métis, and Inuit communities across Canada. The future labour supply is here, already in Canada. We need to better encourage their participation. Most of our training centres have been very aggressive in trying to recruit women into the industry. Despite our efforts, female participation remains very low, and much more needs to be done.
Also, our training centres are reaching out to first nations communities, but it's a piecemeal approach. We need more of a national approach. We've actually approached the Assembly of First Nations to partner at a national level, but this is in the early stages. At some point we'd love to come back to update you on the progress of that.
We wish we as a union could do more, but despite being the trainers of choice, we face the challenge of exclusion from any government programs because we do not employ the tradesperson. We have the facilities and the knowledge to help develop and maintain the workforce in Canada, so we need some cooperation and support to allow us to reach our potential as trainers, and we are more than willing to work with government to find ways to do that.
Thank you.