Members of the House of Commons Standing Committee on Human Resources, Skills and Social Development and the Status of Persons with Disabilities, ladies and gentlemen, I'd like to thank you for this opportunity to speak before the committee.
My name is Monique Sauvé. I am President of the Réseau des carrefours jeunesse-emploi du Québec and Executive Director of the Laval Carrefour jeunesse-emploi.
I'd like to speak about the Employment Assistance Services program and about the work the CJE are doing in Quebec to help young people and their communities. Each year, more than 60,000 Quebec youth experience success in their lives thanks to individualized support from the CJEs.
I will then talk about our essential role in matching training and jobs for all young people in Quebec, regardless of their profile; and in helping young people find their place in society by helping them to find meaningful employment, return to school or start a small business.
But first, I'd like to express our gratitude to the federal government for renewing the Canada-Quebec Labour Market Development Agreement and for consolidating the assistance provided to Quebec youth. We would also like to applaud Minister Jason Kenney's willingness to acknowledge Quebec's reality by renewing this agreement. Not renewing it would have had an unprecedented impact on Quebec youth and their active involvement in the labour market.
In March 2014, the Institut de la statistique du Québec reported that the participation of youth in the labour market had increased 16% between 1996 and 2012. Interestingly, most of the CJEs were created in 1997. Although it is impossible to establish a direct correlation between this statistic and the creation of the CJEs, employment figures certainly confirm that CJEs have played a role in integrating Quebec youth into the labour market.
The CJEs help young people find meaningful employment and complete their studies. According to a recent report by Raymond, Chabot, Grant, Thornton, the activities of CJEs in Quebec generate economic spinoffs of $72 million annually from a government investment of $46 million.
All 110 Carrefours jeunesse-emploi have been in existence for more than 15 years. They provide young adults with job search counselling, educational and vocational advice, entrepreneurship awareness, and business start-up guidance. Besides these services, their approach, expertise, ingenuity, and innovations are unique and underlie their achievements throughout the years.
In an environment of comprehensive flexible support that reflects their realities, the young people who use the services of a CJE have an opportunity to take part in stimulating projects and activities that help steer them toward successful employment in jobs they will want to keep and that fulfil their aspirations.
CJE clients experience success through services and projects that are tailored to their needs. This flexibility is possible because of unique and special financial support from the Employment Assistance Services program that reflects the mandate of the CJEs, and supports our work, the services we offer, and our success with young people in Quebec.
At Carrefours jeunesse-emploi we allow our services and projects to evolve with the job market reality, the needs of young adults, and community dynamics. The CJEs become innovative leaders as they initiate youth projects, new partnerships, and get involved in local dialogue on the realities facing young adults. The CJEs are an absolute must in their community. Together with their partners they help young adults become active citizens who blossom in their jobs, and are proud of themselves, with their diploma or business plan in their hands.
As partnerships multiply and financial contributions increase and are added to our base funding, we have been able to consolidate our youth expertise and develop innovative solutions to meet the diverse needs of young adults.
During the past four years, more than 30% of funding for Employment Assistance Services activities, that is, nearly $15 million, has come from our community and from revenue-generating activities.
CJE services and projects are open to all youth between the ages of 16 and 35 years, regardless of their profile. Some clients just need a little boost. Others want to find out what job and training options are available to them, and some need more sustained support to deal with difficult life circumstances.
With their CJE counsellor, young people who have completed their studies will explore trades and professions that are in line with their area of study and level of education. Vulnerable youth who are further from the job market might look toward semi-skilled or unskilled jobs, or take additional steps towards employment by participating in Skills Link activities under the federal government's Youth Employment Strategy. Job placements enable these young people to acquire the basic skills they need to successfully transition to the labour market. Although the education level of CJE clients tends to be lower than the Quebec average, ongoing support makes realistic employment goals possible.
All Carrefours jeunesse-emploi counsellors are well informed about job opportunities and education since they work hard for the perfect fit between the young adult's interests and skills and a quality job. This expertise contributes tremendously to facing up to one's major job market challenge: the job and education match. In recent years the CJEs have demonstrated significant efforts to increase their partnerships with school and their knowledge of all the innovative education programs.
When it comes to job match, all counsellors have been impressively creative in their approach to their economic community, by providing job fair events for young adults, promoting internships, and offering workshops on job and education conciliation. As the job-education match and mismatch becomes a reality that we need to address, all the CJEs are already acting to make all discrepancies disappear, offering the perfect fit for each and every young adult who comes to us.
It's only fitting that we hear from one of our young people.
Violence, bullying, substance abuse, family issues, homelessness: Jason, a current carrefour jeunesse-emploi client, has experienced all of them. He lived on the streets of downtown Montreal from the age of 15 to 20. He is now 23 years old and trying to get his life back on track. When Jason was 12, his widowed mother could no longer take care of him. “At 15, I dropped out of school because I was being bullied.”
After living with three different families, he ended up in a youth shelter. “I had to find a job. I fell in with the wrong crowd.” To survive, he stole and abused substances. He spent three weeks in jail. Yet, Jason says that he liked studying. With the help of Emploi-Québec and his CJE, he has his eyes set on big dreams. “I have projects on the back-burner and I'm keeping all the doors open.” Jason is currently enrolled in the secondary school vocational diploma (DEP) program and has started a small business.
The work of Quebec's CJEs with young people like Jason and many other young people in the province is critical and essential. The CJEs work every day to ensure that young people can find their place in our society.
I thank the members of the Standing Committee on Human Resources, Skills and Social Development and the Status of Persons with Disabilities for their attention.
It is a great privilege for me to be here.
Thank you.