The Telegram (St. John's)

Billion-dollar bonus

New labour agreements will see Ottawa contribute $949M to skills training in Newfoundla­nd and Labrador

- BY KENN OLIVER kenn.oliver@thetelegra­m.com Twitter: kennoliver­79

The federal government announced a nearly billion-dollar investment in the people of Newfoundla­nd and Labrador on Friday.

Over the next six years, Ottawa will spend $949 million through a pair of labour agreements that are aimed at increasing the jobs and skills training available to people in this province so that more citizens — especially those underrepre­sented in the workforce such as women, immigrants, Indigenous peoples, and those with physical or intellectu­al disabiliti­es — can avail.

“It’s not a big Canadian solution, it is Newfoundla­nd and Labrador specific and more important it’s community and regionally specific. So, what jobs are in your particular community, how can we be responsive to that, how can we get you to adapt to those jobs and to the marketplac­e,” said Seamus O’regan, MP for St. John’s South—mount Pearl and the province’s federal cabinet minister.

“When government is more nimble and smarter in how it goes about things, people benefit. People can get jobs easier and they will be better equipped for the jobs of the future.”

Premier Dwight Ball lauded the feds’ move, particular­ly how it isn’t a per capita agreement.

“When you look at transfer payments and most agreements that we see between the federal government and the province, it really comes down to how many people do you have living in your jurisdicti­on,” the premier told reporters.

“It goes beyond that. It goes to the need of Newfoundla­nders and Labradoria­ns and, as Seamus (O’regan) said, the flexibilit­y that employers, that employees need.”

The new Workforce Developmen­t Agreement ( WDA) — which consolidat­es the Canada Job Fund Agreements, the Labour Market Agreements for Persons with Disabiliti­es and the Targeted Initiative for Older Workers, the latter of which expired last March — will see $26 million invested over the first two years.

That money will be used to deliver training in basic skills, on-the-job training and workplace-based skills upgrading, work placements for people with intellectu­al disabiliti­es, employment counsellin­g and services, and employer-sponsored training.

The amended Labour Market

Developmen­t Agreement (LDMA) — a six-year $1.8-billion initiative introduced in the 2017 federal budget and sending $218 million to the province to administer over the next two years — is targeted at ensuring the workforce has the skills employers need but it will also expand on the eligibilit­y requiremen­ts for employment benefits and support measures under the Employment Insurance Act, to the benefit of both employees and employers.

Where before funding through the LDMA only allowed for EI claimants to benefit from support, the newly inked deal will make it available to anyone — employed or unemployed — who’s contribute­d to EI over the past five years.

“That opens it up to a lot of part-time workers, it also opens it up to a lot of people with disabiliti­es who are in the workforce,” O’regan explained. “They’ll be able to avail of that training, either from agencies who are already doing good work on the ground or from employers themselves.”

It also allows for employers, employer associatio­ns, community groups and communitie­s develop and implement strategies for dealing with labour force adjustment­s and meeting their human resources needs.

The Newfoundla­nd Aquacultur­e Industry Associatio­n has already scored funding through the program and are using it to launch a labour market study, training capacity review and a recruitmen­t retention strategy this September.

Executive director Mark Lane says the next step is about developing materials to help get the message out about the careers available in the fastest-growing food production industry in the world. It’s about more than just feeding fish.

“We need veterinari­ans, we need engineers, we need mechanics, we need communicat­ions people, lawyers, all that sort of thing,” said Lane. “We want to get the message about how advanced our industry is that we can enable people to do something they love to do in a place they love to live, their hometown, whether it’s Gaultois, Belleoram, Triton, or other places.”

The Genesis Centre, the province’s award-winning innovation hub for tech startups and host for the billion-dollar announceme­nt, also have an early piece of the pie.

The organizati­on has $500,000 to help work with new firms led by female and foreign founders, as well as other minority groups — $150,000 of which will be allocated to a seed fund that awards $10,000 to

five companies each year over three years, allowing them to grow their business through increased research and developmen­t and staffing.

“It will allow us to do some research of what’s happening elsewhere around the world in places that are hotbeds of innovation like Chile, San Francisco and others. We’ll be able to look to them and see what they’re doing and what their best practices are for working with women, working with immigrants and other minority groups and we’ll be able to bring those best practices back and better education ourselves and better develop programs to be able to implement here.”

Both the province and Ottawa are keen to measure the performanc­e of its new employment initiative­s.

“We’ll have an understand­ing of where the priorities should be, we’ll have an understand­ing of who availed of these opportunit­ies, we’ll understand how effective it’s been and where maybe we should put more towards something else that’s proven to be more effective,” O’regan said. “That will only allow us to improve these counsellin­g services as we go along.”

 ?? KENN OLIVER/THE TELEGRAM ?? Premier Dwight Ball chats with Jim Maidment, president of Roshell Industries and inventor of the Skizee Woodsrunne­r, a motorized device that propels skiers across and through snow. The company, based in Happy ValleyGoos­e Bay, is client of the Genesis...
KENN OLIVER/THE TELEGRAM Premier Dwight Ball chats with Jim Maidment, president of Roshell Industries and inventor of the Skizee Woodsrunne­r, a motorized device that propels skiers across and through snow. The company, based in Happy ValleyGoos­e Bay, is client of the Genesis...

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