Thank you very much.
Greetings, everyone.
My name is Kevin Cougler, and I'm the founder and executive director of STEM Camp, which has been a registered Canadian not-for-profit since 2015. I'd like to introduce you to Andrew Downing, who is our director of operations and is with you in person today. Thank you for the invitation to testify before this committee.
STEM Camp has participated in the Canada summer jobs program since 2016. To my knowledge, we're one of the largest participants across Canada, having employed approximately 2,028 summer staff during this period.
STEM Camp is a summer day camp that provides programming in the areas of science, technology, engineering and mathematics. In 2023, we operated in 54 locations with 12,416 enrolments. In total, 55,906 campers have benefited from attending STEM Camp, which is an opportunity that would not exist without this program.
The Canada summer jobs program has made significant improvements since STEM Camp first participated in 2016. These include, but are not limited to, the ability to duplicate and edit grant applications, receiving final project payments in a much more timely fashion and having only one project officer assigned to an organization, instead of one officer for each project, which is significant for an organization the size of STEM Camp.
While these improvements have been noteworthy and appreciated, I would like to respectfully submit some suggestions for program enhancement based upon our experience.
Number one, we recommend allowing an organization to refill a position after an employee quits or is terminated for cause without sacrificing the subsidy. Currently, if a worker quits after four weeks and a new employee is hired, the subsidy cannot be used for either worker because they have not achieved the six-week minimum employment requirement. This causes the organization undue financial hardship. It should also be noted that, unfortunately, there is an ever-increasing trend of youth not fulfilling their contractual employment obligations. I'm sure my colleagues Ben and Krista will attest to that fact as well.
Number two, declaration forms can't be submitted until the employment start date. For STEM Camp, this results in manually submitting over 400 forms on the very first day of camp. If you've ever been to camp, you'll know that camp is very busy the first day. It would be helpful to be able to submit these forms when the employee is hired, which would also result in receiving advances prior to the first pay period. Currently, by having to wait to submit declaration forms on the first day of employment, employers must wait sometimes for three pay periods before the advance is received. This places an organization the size of STEM Camp in a significant financial deficit for many weeks. Our recommendation is to allow the declaration forms to be submitted as soon as the employee is hired. If the forms could be submitted digitally instead of manually entering the information from each form, this would save us countless hours of typing.
Number three, we recommend re-establishing Service Canada checks and balances to ensure that the terms of the CSJ agreement are being followed by every organization that receives the subsidy. These used to take place in greater number prior to COVID. After the pandemic, I imagine resources were stretched, but we haven't seen an awful lot of checks and balances to ensure that the program dollars are being spent according to their intention and their contractual obligation.
Number four, it's increasingly difficult to find Canadian students to fill summer camp positions, and it would be helpful for employers to be able to hire people who are on visas, whether these are straight work visas or student visas, especially when Canadians cannot be found to fill those positions. We turn away dozens of qualified applicants each year who are here on student visas and would be fantastic workers.
In closing, the cost of operating a summer camp far exceeds what a parent is willing to pay to send their child to camp. This is not unique to STEM Camp. Most summer camps would not exist without the CSJ program, including STEM Camp. The program has provided us with the ability to create and deliver fun, educational summer programming that inspires children to learn about STEM, encourages them to pursue STEM education subjects and, more importantly, helps solve current and anticipated Canadian labour shortages.
Supporting and increasing investment in the CSJ program means supporting Canadian youth in their quest to become the innovators of tomorrow.
That concludes my testimony. Thank you for this opportunity.
I do have some other recommendations that, due to time constraints, I'm not able to include, but I would be—