Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I would like to thank you for inviting the National Association of Career Colleges to speak about labour market development agreements. Since 1896, our association has represented for-profit and not-for-profit private institutions involved in post-secondary education and training. We have about 160,000 students throughout the country, which is about eight per cent of the total post-secondary student population, and our members directly employ about 17,000 Canadians.
Training can't continue to be a political football between provincial and federal governments. With an increasingly connected economy and global trends, what happens in one region affects another. Canada, in the grand scheme of things, is a country with a small population. We need to pay serious attention to global trends. In the recent debate about the Canada job grant, there was a lot of discussion on who is responsible for training. Let me answer. We all are, and the solutions are local, provincial, and national. This is why we strongly support a federal government that sets standards and requires clear and tangible deliverables for the funding it gives. This is why we strongly supported the Canada job grant.
We understand the job market in one region is different from that in another region, but those who say that solutions are only local or provincial fail to recognize that in the 21st century, individuals are much more mobile and they tend to go where the jobs are. Mr. Mayes gave the example of the young people from British Columbia who moved to Alberta. We have to recognize the situation, and this is why a national perspective is so important.
I will divide my comments into two parts: the use of funds, and the measurement of success.
We firmly believe that the best use of Canadian taxpayers' dollars resides in skills development. We would, therefore, advise the government that it take a number of measures for its funding mechanisms such as the LMDAs, including the following.
First, it should ensure that the level of funds available to students is sufficient to cover the cost of training and living, because offering insufficient funding is probably worse than offering nothing at all.
Second, it should develop funding mechanisms that are not overly cumbersome or complicated. Not all candidates are able to navigate what some believe to be a highly bureaucratic process. Those who often can't go through the process are often those who need help the most.
Third, it should make sure that money is not spent to curry political favours at the provincial levels by funding deficits in public post-secondary institutions. The intent of LMDAs is not to fund the operating budgets of public post-secondary institutions.
Fourth, it should involve private post-secondary institutions in public policy decision-making as much as possible. We have our feet on the ground and can offer sound advice.
Fifth, it should ensure that when there is a way to offer services and training through private means, it is used. The private sector, such as career colleges, is often more responsive, more innovative, and faster to develop solutions.
Sixth, it should verify that funding is used to have job-ready graduates with the possibility of employment. Stop, I repeat, stop all discrimination in programs that see some initiatives only open to public post-secondary institutions.
We also need to involve employers in the training process. I've had the opportunity to participate in the mission to Europe on skills training led by the Honourable Jason Kenney and Mr. Armstrong, who is here. It was an eye-opening experience that showed how employers in Germany and the U.K. are intrinsically involved in training. While the German system can't be implemented directly in Canada, employers need to be brought to the table. They are part of the solution that will see us providing stable, long-term employment to an increasing number of Canadians.
Governments must fund programs for the LMDA that have employer involvement in a design of curriculum or the definition of the expected outcomes. There is too often a disconnect between the skills taught to the graduates and the expectation from employers.
Let me give you two examples that ended up in very successful outcomes—which you might use for your next topic on aboriginals, by the way. The company operating the nickel mine in Voisey's Bay approached one of our members at Academy Canada to provide training in local aboriginal communities. They needed a workforce and couldn't get one with the proper skills. The training was done within the community by Academy Canada. Their results skyrocketed, with participants going from a 7% completion rate to a 76% completion rate. The employer was pleased and the local community leaders were also extremely satisfied. This was a win-win situation for everyone involved.
An American company operating in Ottawa needed to increase its skilled workforce. It had two choices, either to pull out of Ottawa and move elsewhere—and I don't think it would be in Canada—or find a partner to train potential employees. The result was a partnership between Fortinet, a multi-billion dollar company, and Willis College, a small college just down the street here, that will lead to more than 200 jobs with salaries of more than $100,000 each. Career colleges know how to create those partnerships, and those are the types of partnerships that the federal government should try to enhance.
Finally, we would strongly suggest that the federal government start discussions with the provinces on how to open apprenticeships to other educational groups. Too often our career colleges are excluded from being able to offer apprenticeship programs, especially in the trades. That's a provincial decision.
We need to re-evaluate the way we measure success. Here are some thoughts: the number of dollars invested per graduate; employment rates for graduates in various wage categories per chosen sector of activities; how many partnerships with industry have been created. I couldn't stop thinking when I listened to the previous speakers about the numbers—640,000 people, a million people. The more it goes, the larger the number was, which was very interesting. But the question is, how many of those people have real and meaningful jobs? How many of those people came year after year? Within the 640,000 people, how many of them were there in 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012? If you're going to talk about measuring success, we need to have real measurable criteria that we can really use.
Too often we benchmark the success of programs by using the number of people having gone through an activity, but the activity leads to something positive such as meaningful and long-term employment. Training the same person year over year on how to write a resumé should not be seen as a positive result. Getting that person a long-term, meaningful job to allow her or him to provide for their family is a successful result. We hope for more of those outcomes.
In Alberta, where I went a few months ago for discussions with the provincial government, I was given the numbers of graduates of career colleges in Alberta. Over 90% of them find employment in their chosen field of study within three months of graduation. For me, this is a success because you know that these people are getting good and meaningful employment for the future, and that's what we'd like to repeat more often here.
Thank you.