I'll be speaking, thanks. I'm giving into age, so I need these....
Thank you very much.
Good morning, Mr. Chair, and honourable members. Thank you very much for this opportunity to present to the Standing Committee on Human Resources and to participate in this important discussion on aboriginal employment.
I'm pleased to be able to present today on behalf of Vale together with my colleague, Bob Carter, from our operations in Newfoundland and Labrador, and to contribute our experience to the committee's work both as an active employer of aboriginal peoples and as an industry partner in the process of program development. Achieving sustainable employment opportunities for aboriginal peoples in Canada requires multi-faceted partnerships and commitment from industry, government, and aboriginal leadership alike.
As a mining company, Vale recognizes the obligation it has to ensure that aboriginal communities participate in and benefit from the development of resources on traditional lands. Employment is one of the most important and enduring means of building the partnerships that deliver mutual benefit.
Wherever we do business in Canada, Vale engages with local aboriginal communities. The need for skills development and employment training is a focal point in many of those discussions, whether it be in preparation for employment at one of our facilities specifically or in preparation for employment in the community at large. There's perhaps no better example of the results that effective collaboration can deliver with the appropriate partners, participation, and commitment than at our mine site in Voisey's Bay, Labrador. I'd like to focus on that experience today as I believe it provides some excellent learning for the work this committee is considering.
While there is no one-size-fits-all solution to exploring partnerships, it's equally true that past success can help guide future success. In that context, our experience at Voisey's Bay provides important insights into the factors and the groups that are essential to effectively and efficiently shaping programs and developing models to enhance opportunities for aboriginal employment across Canada.
Allow me to begin with some background. In the late 1990s, Vale, which was then Inco, acquired the rights to develop a significant nickel deposit at Voisey's Bay. In 2005, the construction of the development was completed. The Voisey's Bay deposits are located on the traditional lands of the Innu and Inuit of Labrador. Given their rights over these lands, Vale entered into impacts and benefits agreements, IBAs, that set out how the land would be used and the benefits that would accrue to the Innu and the Inuit.
The subsequent development of this resource has resulted in billions of dollars in investment benefiting all levels of government and most importantly, transforming the economic prospects of the residents in adjacent communities. Beyond generating 5,000 jobs during construction, the operations currently employ around 500 people on a permanent basis.
From the outset, Vale, the federal government, and our aboriginal partners had an explicit focus on economic development that delivered both direct employment and contracting to aboriginal businesses and built capacity for the long term. This common commitment among partners delivered an outcome that sees greater than 50% aboriginal direct employment at Voisey's Bay operations, levels that Vale maintains to this day.
During the construction phase of the mine's development from 2002 to 2005, Vale awarded $515 million in contracts to aboriginal businesses. Since operations began in 2005, the company has flowed more than $1.2 billion in contracts to aboriginal businesses to support the ongoing operations of the mine. On a continuous basis, more than 80% of our contracts are with aboriginal owned or operated businesses.
This combination of an impressive retention rate of aboriginal employees and consistent follow-through on commitments has created an enduring relationship between Vale and our aboriginal partners. The involvement of the federal government in providing training support was a key component of the success experienced during the initial phase at Voisey's Bay. Federal support for training was essential to enabling job readiness and eventually putting people to work.
The skills and training program developed and implemented at the time was called the joint employment and training authority, JETA. It was a pilot program that became a model for future training initiatives in Canada. The JETA partners worked together to ensure that training was timely and focused on entry-level job skills that ultimately led to employment. More than 1,100 people received training support through JETA, establishing the foundation upon which Vale could build a successful recruitment and employment program, a program that has created long-term jobs for residents of local aboriginal communities over the past decade. The success of this training initiative has been widely recognized by governments and industry.
The successes in Voisey's Bay are many. We are proud to have partnered with the federal government, as well as the Innu and Inuit, to develop a training and employment model that has brought benefits to all. Collaboration, consultation, and early alignment among the partners unlocked extraordinary opportunity. This success is relevant as we look to the future. In the coming years, Vale plans to move ahead with developing the underground deposits at Voisey's Bay. This will extend the life of the mine as well as the employment horizon by decades.
In employment terms, developing the underground is expected to produce more than 800 construction jobs, and an additional 400 permanent jobs when underground mining begins in late 2019. There is clear opportunity ahead of us, but from an aboriginal employment standpoint it involves a new challenge. The employment needs for the underground phase are different from those of the current surface operation, and very technically driven. All parties require significant lead time to develop the skills required to work underground.
In anticipation of these needs, Vale has already begun to engage its aboriginal partners in discussions to determine the metrics, the structure, and the timeframe for taking on the training challenges associated with this next phase.
Our objective and our desire is to build on the extraordinary results we achieved together in the first decade by developing the Voisey's Bay resource as a foundation for the future, to deliver the same lasting benefit from the underground to all those with a stake in its success.
We are understandably proud of the accomplishments at Voisey's Bay and are working hard to achieve similar successes in our other operations.
In Thompson, Manitoba, for example, we have an integrated mining operation located in a region with a serious underemployment issue. In this remote northern location, Vale struggles to maintain its employment base despite the fact that certain surrounding communities have high rates of unemployment. We have encountered several barriers to aboriginal employment in particular.
We have launched a northern employment strategy in Thompson and seen some encouraging results with increasing hires from surrounding northern communities, but there remains a significant deficit of essential skills among the aboriginal communities, making it difficult to get candidates into Vale's recruitment and selection pipeline. Also, the lack of workplace and social readiness, often developed through pre-employment opportunities, presented barriers to the recruitment of aboriginal peoples.
I don't believe Vale's situation in Thompson is unique in the mining industry, and this is an area where we believe the federal government has an important role to play. Equipping aboriginal communities with access to appropriate and high-quality essential skills training will go a long way to complement the recruitment and selection programs that many mining companies have in place.
Together the private sector, government, and local communities can develop approaches that will ultimately produce rewarding, skilled jobs in the communities where people live. Ultimately, this is something we all want.
Thank you again for the invitation to speak to the committee today. We welcome the opportunity to contribute to the committee's efforts in this area, and we remain at your disposal as you develop your recommendations. Thank you.