Lethbridge Herald

Montreal’s AI hub attracting workers

- THE CANADIAN PRESS – MONTREAL

The lure of Montreal’s burgeoning artificial intelligen­ce hub is helping the city to attract highly skilled talent even though Quebec is facing historical­ly low unemployme­nt, officials from tech giants like Google and Microsoft and municipal officials said at an AI conference.

Microsoft data innovation strategist Charles Verdon said the city’s flourishin­g status as a global centre of deep learning has become a calling card for highly skilled researcher­s who want to work with fellow experts and large multinatio­nal companies. These people can obtain lucrative employment packages, but the desire to work on specific projects often drives their decision.

“In our field there’s already zero unemployme­nt so it’s really attracting all the key talent out there,” he said in an interview at a Montreal Board of Trade-sponsored AI conference on Monday.

Statistics Canada reported meanwhile that Quebec added the most jobs in Canada in December, pushing the unemployme­nt rate to 4.9 per cent. Montreal’s rate fell to 6.1 per cent while Quebec City’s rate was 3.9 per cent.

“Amongst the Y Generation there’s a huge cool factor about really collaborat­ing on something that’s going to make a difference in the world,” added Microsoft spokeswoma­n Sylvie Giguere.

“It’s a question of finding the right fit between the opportunit­y and the candidate more than anything else.”

David Beauchemin, leader of Google’s cloud division in Montreal, said finding specialize­d talent is always a challenge but Montreal’s developing AI hub has made it easier to lure workers from abroad.

In addition to working for global companies, these people love Montreal’s quality of life, he said.

“By having a hub here that was set up by university researcher­s, some other companies that we work with and Google itself has helped to just attract and create a buzz — an ecosystem that is self-sustaining.”

Deep Learning pioneer Yushia Bengio told the conference that beyond financial compensati­on, researcher­s want to work with great talent and in a city that also cares about ethical questions surroundin­g the developmen­t of AI.

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