Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Before I get started, I want to say that I would be pleased to answer members' questions in French. However, as the executive director of an organization representing the English-speaking community in Quebec, I will be giving my opening statement in English.
Mr. Chair and esteemed committee members, on behalf of the Provincial Employment Roundtable, thank you for the opportunity to speak with you today.
Through my remarks and our discussion, I hope to highlight the issues and needs of Quebec's English-speaking communities as they pertain to employment.
First off, here is a bit more background about who we are. The Provincial Employment Roundtable, otherwise known as PERT, is a non-profit, multi-stakeholder initiative whose main goal is to address issues of employment and employability facing the English-speaking community in Quebec.
PERT accomplishes this through researching the major challenges that these communities face, and by engaging with our network of over 90 members from across the province of Quebec. Our members contribute their knowledge and expertise through their participation in our four sectoral tables, which regroup employment service providers, employers, educators and regional community organizations. Our sectoral tables inform our research agenda and provide feedback on our analysis. They also serve as a place for collective mobilization and the development of solutions and initiatives to help address and increase awareness of the employment issues our communities face.
While I'm pleased to be here today to have the opportunity to share the most up-to-date employment statistics regarding Quebec’s English speakers, the economic trends that these statistics reveal are truly worrying.
PERT’s quantitative research, which primarily uses Canadian census data, shows that Quebec's English speakers, who represent 57.4% of the total official-language minority community labour force in Canada, experience higher levels of unemployment, lower incomes and higher rates of poverty than the French-speaking majority in Quebec, as well as all other OLMCs across the country.
More specifically, our analysis of the new 2021 census data shows that English speakers had an unemployment rate of 10.9%, which is four percentage points higher than that of Quebec’s French speakers at 6.9%. English speakers also earn a median employment income that is $5,200 lower than French speakers. These gaps in unemployment and income have been present and growing since at least 2001, and have effectively doubled between 2016 and 2021. A deeper dive into unemployment and income data shows that there are disparities even within the English-speaking community, with English speakers living in the regions, as well as visible minorities, immigrants, first nations and Inuit, experiencing worse outcomes.
While the myth of the wealthy Quebec anglophone persists, the realities on the ground are very different. We see high levels of income disparity within Quebec's English community and disproportionately higher rates of poverty compared to French speakers: 10% versus 5.8%. Despite representing only 14.9% of Quebec's population, the English-speaking community accounts for nearly one-quarter, 23%, of the nearly 450,000 Quebeckers living in poverty.
The data is pretty stark. The English-speaking community in Quebec faces important economic challenges, and these challenges are a threat to its continued vitality in the province.
To find appropriate solutions, however, it's important to understand why English speakers have been falling behind in recent years. The research we have done thus far has helped us to identify three main barriers to employment driving the downward economic trends for our community: first, a lack of access to specialized and targeted English-language employment services; second, an ineffective French-language learning system, particularly for adults in the labour market, and the lack of diverse programs offered to support the language-learning needs of individuals in key professions; and lastly, a lack of access to English-language skills training programs due to the limited availability of these programs across the province, particularly in the regions. Data shows, for example, that English speakers complete vocational and technical training programs at less than half the rate of francophones, at 6.2% versus 13.2%, limiting their ability to participate in in-demand trades and careers in Quebec.
As you all know, employment is an area of shared jurisdiction. As such, we believe that to effectively address the challenges and begin to reverse the worrying employment and economic vitality trends we’ve outlined, governments across all jurisdictions need to work together in a collaborative and coordinated way.
The first steps in doing this work involve recognizing employment as a cornerstone of economic development and community vitality in the English-speaking community of Quebec, and developing a strategy that prioritizes impact and accountability; improving the relationship between federal institutions and the English-speaking community in Quebec concerning economic development; ensuring coordination and co-operation between the federal government, particularly Canadian Heritage and ESDC, and the provincial government in areas of shared jurisdiction; investing in research on the employment and economic development of the English-speaking community; and developing a pan-Canadian plan to strengthen investments in free and accessible adult French-language training programs.
Over the last three years, PERT has built a robust and diverse network of partners whose perspectives and expertise drive our capacity to develop solutions to the problems I have outlined today. We are especially proud of our partnership with the Regional Development Network and YES, an employment organization in Montreal with which we've deployed a French-language confidence-building program for jobseekers across the province.
Nevertheless, all of our members and stakeholders stand ready to work with all levels of government to develop and implement innovative solutions that will help address our community's employment challenges. The one missing piece we require to put our vision in place is adequate and sustainable government investment.
Thank you for your time.
I would be pleased to answer your questions in French, as best I can.