Good afternoon, everyone.
On behalf of Employment and Social Development Canada (ESDC), I would like to thank the committee for the invitation and the opportunity to speak with you today on the government's commitment to increasing skills and employment opportunities for Aboriginal people through its Aboriginal labour market programs.
ESDC maintains positive relationships with many aboriginal organizations and views them all as important partners in economic and social development.
I know there are specific questions and information sought by the committee with respect to ESDC's aboriginal labour market programming and how programming has impacted aboriginal people. I will do my best to answer those questions to the extent that I can. In order to answer these questions, I would like to start by providing an overview of the aboriginal labour market context in Canada. Following my presentation, I will be happy to answer any other questions you may have.
The aboriginal population continues to face complex and persistent challenges that impact their participation in Canada's economic and social development.
A case in point is the unemployment rate of the aboriginal population in Canada. In 2011 the unemployment rate for aboriginal people was 15%. In comparison, the unemployment rate among the non-aboriginal population was 7.5%. If you break the three aboriginal groups into their individual numbers, the unemployment rates in 2011 are as follows: Métis at 10.4%; first nations at 18.3%; and Inuit, the highest, at 19.6%.
These statistics tell us that from a labour market efficiency perspective, the aboriginal population is a source of labour that is underutilized.
Added to this situation is the fact that the Aboriginal population is the youngest and fastest growing segment of the Canadian population, with a median age that is 13 years younger than the Canadian population at large.
Growth is four times the rate of the non-Aboriginal population. Between 2006 and 2011, the Aboriginal population grew by 20.1%, compared to a 5.2% increase for the non-Aboriginal population.
Comparatively, the Canadian population continues to age, with many leaving the labour force for retirement.
In addition, the demand for Canada's natural resources has driven a growth in expected job opportunities that will increase the need for skilled labour. Given the proximity of many First Nations communities to large economic projects, there is a tremendous opportunity to address some of Canada's skills shortages, while improving economic opportunities for Aboriginal people.
This underutilized and untapped source of labour underscores the reason ESDC's investments in aboriginal skills development and training are vitally important at this juncture in time.
ESDC has a long history of supporting skills development and training of Aboriginal Canadians by working with Aboriginal organizations to design and deliver tailored labour market programming to meet the unique needs of people in their communities.
There are three aboriginal-specific programs that I would like to mention today that help aboriginal people to acquire the skills they need to participate in the Canadian economy. It is important to note that two of these programs are accessible to all aboriginal people, regardless of their affiliation, first nations, Inuit, or Métis, or their residency, on reserve or off reserve, while the third is targeted to first nations on reserve only.
The aboriginal skills and employment training strategy, or ASETS as we call it, is ESDC's flagship program that helps all aboriginal people, first nations, Inuit and Métis, prepare for, find, and keep high-demand jobs.
Launched in April 2010, ASETS will invest $1.68 billion over five years, 2010 to 2015, in aboriginal service delivery organizations to deliver skills development and training to aboriginal people throughout Canada. There are 85 aboriginal service delivery organizations providing employment services through more than 600 points of service across the country in urban, rural, and remote areas.
ASETS is founded on three strategic pillars: one, providing demand-driven skills development; two, fostering partnerships with the private sector and other levels of government; and three, ensuring accountability for improved results.
ASETS is demonstrating increased employment and return-to-school outcomes. Since 2010, ASETS has seen approximately 48,000 clients become employed, 22,000 clients return to school, 128,000 clients complete one or more interventions, and over 50% of clients either employed or returned to school.
I would also like to mention an important component of ASETS programming that helps facilitate an individual's participation in education and training, and that is child care. Under ASETS, $55 million per year under the first nations and Inuit child care initiative supports a network of 8,500 child care spaces in over 450 sites in first nations and Inuit communities across Canada.
Child care is an eligible expense under ASETS programming. Any ASETS service delivery organization can choose to use a portion of what they receive through their ASETS agreement funding to fund child care for parents who are in training. This includes Métis, non-status Indians, and off-reserve first nations.
Given the focus of this HUMA study, I would like to share with you an example of how the program has provided the necessary skills and training leading to employment for one of its participants.
Lucien Ledoux, is an aboriginal welder employed with Running Deer Resources located in Manitoba. He was selected as a role model to speak on behalf of aboriginal youth at an aboriginal mining conference. He said, “Being certified”—as a welder—“has allowed me to get opportunities I would not have had otherwise. My life has become structured and I find things more valuable to me now because I earned them.” In addition, he stated, '“There is a sense of accomplishment when you know something you built will be standing long after you are gone.” He noted that his family is very proud of his accomplishments, which he said have made them strive for more in their own lives. His success was made possible through ASETS, which provides funding support to a local ASETS service delivery organization in Winnipeg, Manitoba.
Through ASETS, First Nations, Inuit, and Métis organizations are fostering a stronger, more vibrant workforce through partnerships with employers across Canada. Whether Aboriginal organizations are encouraging small businesses to hire Aboriginal people through wage subsidies or negotiating complex multi-stakeholder partnerships with major corporations, the result is training that is aligned to concrete employment opportunities.
The second aboriginal labour market program administered by ESDC is the skills and partnership fund, or SPF. SPF was launched in July 2010 and is funded at $210 million over five years.
SPF is a flexible project-based program that leverages partnerships and responds to government priorities and emerging untapped labour market needs to get aboriginal people into jobs. SPF targets aboriginal people for skills development and training, including for high-skilled in-demand jobs.
SPF also targets major economic training-to-employment projects in high-demand sectors. To date, SPF has had three calls for proposals. The first and second calls for proposal were open and more general in nature and resulted in numerous small to medium-sized projects up to about $3 million that were shorter term, focusing on skills training for short-term small to mid-sized skills development initiatives and innovation in service delivery.
Under the first two calls for proposals, SPF leveraged varied partnership contributions from employers. In 2012 the third call for proposals incorporated a targeted approach to support projects in the natural resource sector, in particular, the mining and energy sectors.
This approach built on the successes and best practices from the aboriginal skills and employment partnership program, ASEP. The approach focused on areas where there is known demand for long-term jobs and required a mandatory minimum contribution of 50% from partners, for example, the private sector, provinces and territories, and educational institutions.
SPF provides support for aboriginal communities and organizations to create partnerships with industry on major economic development projects to generate employment and economic benefits for communities located in the catchment area of these projects.
For example, there are projects operating in high-demand areas such as the Ring of Fire in northern Ontario, shipbuilding in the Atlantic and on the west coast, and pipeline projects in British Columbia.
There are currently 80 approved SPF projects, the majority of which are training-to-employment. This means there are employers who have identified available jobs, and partner with organizations to train Aboriginal people for these jobs. SPF is expected to assist more than 8,000 individuals gain employment over the life of the program. All SPF funding is allocated until 2015.
Finally, you will also hear about the on-reserve income assistance reform initiative from my colleagues from Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development Canada. Recently, the government announced in budget 2013 the initiative to improve the on-reserve income assistance program, which is jointly managed by AANDC and ESDC. Income assistance reform is a four-year initiative funded at $241 million to help reduce income assistance dependency rates on reserves.
ESDC's portion of this, the first nations job fund, FNJF, is funded at $109 million. The program will provide job training to 18- to 24-year-olds who were referred from participating first nations communities. The FNJF will be delivered through the ASETS delivery network and will support the same job-training activities that are provided under ASETS.
ASETS and SPF both expire on March 31, 2015. As a result, ESDC is exploring seeking a renewed mandate for aboriginal labour market programming. ESDC has been holding discussions with ASETS and SPF service delivery organizations, national aboriginal organizations, provinces and territories, major employers, and other stakeholders, on the future of ESDC's aboriginal labour market programming beyond 2015.
ESDC held 15 regional engagement sessions across the country between September and November. In addition to the regional sessions, ESDC also met with provinces and territories, employers and some SPF projects. The issues raised in these discussions are a valuable and important component to inform the development of our policy work going forward.
ESDC also formally partners with national aboriginal organizations to collaborate on joint policy priorities and seek feedback on how to improve aboriginal labour market programming, among other things. This work will help inform the future direction of aboriginal labour market programming. These partnership agreements are with the Assembly of First Nations, the Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami, the Métis National Council, the Congress of Aboriginal Peoples, Native Women's Association of Canada, and the National Association of Friendship Centres, the last three of which represent off-reserve first nations as part of their membership base.
Over the coming months we will be analyzing what we have heard from stakeholders during our engagement activities. Analysis of data and outcomes from the programs is being undertaken, but it is premature at this point in time to make any conclusions about the future of this programming beyond 2015.
In conclusion, let me say that ESDC is committed to continue working closely with aboriginal organizations, on and off reserve, urban, rural, and remote, to ensure that aboriginal people can play an active role in Canada's economic and social development.
Thank you for the opportunity to address you today. I would be happy to answer any questions you may have.