Thank you very much, and good afternoon. Thanks for having me back again.
I am pleased to be here today on behalf of the 10,000 members of Canadian Manufacturers and Exporters to discuss Canada's labour market and explore employment opportunities for people with disabilities.
By way of background, more than 85% of CME members are small and medium-sized enterprises representing every industrial sector, every export sector, and from all regions of the country. Our mandate is to promote the competitiveness of Canadian manufacturers and the success of Canada’s goods and services exporters in markets around the world.
CME is also the chair of the Canadian Manufacturing Coalition, a collection of over 50 business associations who speak together about the critical issues that affect Canada's manufacturing economy. Last year, CME and our colleagues in the Canadian Manufacturing Coalition conducted our biannual management issues survey, which received 650 responses from companies with over 2,000 operations across the country. The survey was focused on identifying the major challenges being faced by companies, what their biggest concerns were, and what was restricting their growth in Canada and abroad.
The results were crystal clear: one of the largest concerns to the competitive landscape and economic growth of Canada is the size and strength of Canada’s labour force, today and in the near future. In fact, this survey also showed that nearly 50% of Canadian companies were facing skills shortages today, and due to these shortages, almost one-third of companies are considering relocating operations to jurisdictions outside of Canada. Due to the continuing demographics shift, the number of job vacancies is expected to increase over the next five years.
The economic consequences for Canada will be significant if these challenges are not addressed. This is why CME and our members have been working closely with the government and have been very supportive of the government's agenda to strengthen the domestic labour pool through improved training programs and reforming the EI system. We have also been working closely to strengthen the quality and skill level of international labour to ensure it is matched with the needs of companies through reforms to the immigration system and the temporary foreign worker program.
However, while these reforms are important, there is still so much that Canada can and should be doing to address our labour shortages, especially through engaging our most underemployed segments of the population, mainly aboriginals, youth, and persons with disabilities.
CME has been a long-time advocate and champion of inclusion strategies for all these segments of society because the full participation of these groups is essential to our long-term economic success. We actively participated in, and supported, the panel on labour market opportunities for persons with disabilities and their report, “Rethinking DisAbility in the Private Sector”.
As that report clearly points out, among the biggest challenges employers face is education and understanding the opportunities of integrating persons with disabilities into the workforce, the skill sets these employees bring, and the potential benefits companies can achieve from their full inclusion at all levels of the company.
This is something that CME has recognized and took action on through an initiative called Business Takes Action, or BTA. Between 2008 and 2012, CME partnered with the Ontario government to form this network to support workplace inclusion for people with disabilities and to educate employers. BTA focused on promoting disability inclusion at work, and it became a centre for expertise for best practices and enabling legislation in Ontario.
Over its five years, BTA delivered over 155 workshops promoting and championing workplace inclusion strategies that reached over 7,500 people across the province. It actively engaged with over 550 employers—companies like Tim Hortons, which is here today, and IBM. BTA and CME also published several guides to help educate companies on the benefits of hiring persons with disabilities and provided guidance on how to integrate these employees into the workforce. These education guides and technical manuals are guides that CME still use today to promote inclusion strategies with our members in other companies.
And while the work of the expert panel, CME, and many others is important and has made some strides, much more needs to be done if we are going to tackle the existing labour shortages and support long-term economic growth. Education and information will be critical. Industry needs to work more closely with governments, labour groups, and others to continue to actively promote and support inclusion strategies. Actions like BTA which focused on education and information sharing, should be restarted and supported by governments at all levels and expanded across the country.
I thank you again for inviting CME to participate today, and I look forward to the discussion.