Thank you, Mr. Chair, and committee members, for inviting us to be here today to share with you the views of the Canadian Construction Association on this important issue.
My name is Romeo Bellai, and I'm co-president of the family firm known as Bellai Brothers Construction Ltd. We work in the Ottawa-Gatineau area. We have maybe 22 tower cranes you'll see here in Ottawa that belong to us. We're putting up many condominiums and other developments, so you're talking to somebody who is at the grassroots of what's happening.
We are engaged in every kind of construction activity in Ottawa-Gatineau. We are founding members of the Canadian Construction Association, known as the CCA for short. Joining me today is Bill Ferreira of the CCA, who is director of government relations and public affairs for the association. I am also a director with the Construction Sector Council. My interest in apprenticeships is more than theoretical. It is vital to my competitiveness as an employer in the construction industry, which is why I am so pleased to be here with you today.
With regard to the question of why young people are not more drawn to apprenticeships, I blame my generation. As students, we were inundated with messages from the government, guidance counsellors, the media, our parents, and most important, Hollywood, that the key to a happy and comfortable life was found in a white-collar profession, not a blue-collar profession. With few exceptions, almost every movie or TV show, like Quincy, M.E., focused on medical, legal, or business professions, so not surprisingly, everyone wanted to be an MBA, a lawyer, or a doctor. How did I make it to construction? Well, it's a long story, and that's for after.
No one aspired to be an apprentice. These careers weren't glamorous, nor were they viewed as well paying. When I was in grade 6, my teacher asked me, “Romeo, what do you want to be in life?” I said, “Well, I want to be a bricklayer”. He said, “Why would you want to do that?” I said, “If it's good enough for my dad, why can't I be one?” As I progressed in school, they were always pushing students more towards academia. Anyway, that's my story.
How do we turn this around? To a degree, workforce demand and higher wages are doing this already in some parts of the country. For example, in Alberta, Saskatchewan, and to a lesser degree in Manitoba, the high demand for construction services has created a shortage of apprentices in some skilled trades, particularly in the electrical and mechanical trades. However, the biggest complaint from most employers about new apprentices is in their lack of basic skills, which goes back to my earlier point. Those students with a high degree of proficiency in math, physics, and language simply go to university, while those with lower proficiency in these essential skills are streamed to the trades.
The trouble is that most trades require a high aptitude in math and language. Without that, young apprentices often struggle with in-classroom portions of their training, which is part of the reason that so few apprentices actually complete their training. I've heard of fourth year apprentices in carpentry not wanting to write examinations because they don't have any writing skills. They're stuck in that vortex of being afraid to write an examination.
How do we overcome this challenge? Well, we need to do a better job of promoting the skilled trades to teachers. You've heard many times that a lot of teachers, who are university trained, forget the blue-collar background of most people in this country. So do guidance counsellors. We need to dispel this myth that anyone can learn the skilled trades, which is simply not true, at least not when it comes to the construction trades.
Another recent problem we have seen is the oversubscription to some trades, while others continue to struggle. For example, in many parts of the country, high school graduates are seeking apprenticeships in electrical trades because they think these trades pay better than others. This is simply not true, and it is placing considerable strain on the training system for electrical apprentices, while other equally valuable and well-paying trades remain under-subscribed. This is a perception issue fed by a lack of information about the trades, which is why we believe that better skilled trades promotion at high school together with training for guidance counsellors could help turn the situation around.
We also feel that better national government advertising is a way to help get this message out to the public.
Everyone here is a member of a political party. You do such a great job convincing us to vote for you, perhaps you can have a program to convince children and kids and students to join the trades.