The Woolwich Observer

Manufactur­ing the focus of Elmira roundtable discussion hosted by local MP

- LIZ BEVAN

BOOSTING WATERLOO REGION’S MANUFACTUR­ING sector was the focus of a roundtable discussion in Elmira Tuesday afternoon. Hosted by Kitchener-Conestoga MP Harold Albrecht, the event was held at the Tri-Mach Group offices.

Albrecht was joined by Barrie-Springwate­r-OroMedonte MP Alex Nuttall – the federal opposition critic for economic de- velopment for southern Ontario – members of the Cambridge and Greater Kitchener Waterloo chambers of commerce, and other stakeholde­rs to discuss the future of manufactur­ing in the region.

Tri-Mach Group makes food, liquid and personal health care equipment for various industries.

The round table was designed to get input on the future of manufactur­ing in Ontario from those that are on the ground level, running manufactur­ing operations. Albrecht says it was a productive discussion.

“We got some great ideas from people who are in the manufactur­ing sector, and they shared ideas about how government can help, or at least stay our of the way in terms of being obstacle to businesses and to figure out to expand and create jobs,” he said after the discussion concluded. “Now, we have to give the current government constructi­ve critiques on how we can do this.”

Nuttall will be putting together a report, compiling what he heard at the round table. He says the manufactur­ing sector is struggling.

“We are looking at the process right now and it is leaving manufactur­ers behind. We want to make sure that we are taking them into considerat­ion as we come up with different policies, specifical­ly those that increase the cost of doing business and are taking jobs out of Ontario,” he said.

One of the main issues discussed surrounded how there was more automation involved in manufactur­ing processes, and what that could mean for job creation and retention.

“One in five jobs in the region depend on manufactur­ing. The issue is around skilled trades and having skilled employees,” said Art Sinclair of the Greater Kitchener Waterloo Chamber of Commerce. “We are seeing the transition to automated, or advance manufactur­ing which is actually robotics manufactur­ing products as opposed to the human on the assembly line. Still, though, in robots, right there is a skill set for people that have to take the training to operate the

machines that are used in manufactur­ing across the region.”

Nuttall wants everyone’s opinion to be taken into considerat­ion when moving forward with policies that affect manufactur­ers.

“We can’t wait to work with businesses to make sure their ideas get forwarded to committee, to make sure there are enough skilled trades out there, and how to ensure that there is the right employment available,” he said.

 ?? [LIZ BEVAN / THE OBSERVER] ?? Greg Durocher of the Cambridge Chamber of Commerce, Ron Levene from ODC Tooling and Molds, Michael Hahn of the Tri-Mach Group Inc., Harold Albrecht, Member of Parliament for Kitchener-Conestoga, Art Sinclair from the Greater KW Chamber of Commerce and...
[LIZ BEVAN / THE OBSERVER] Greg Durocher of the Cambridge Chamber of Commerce, Ron Levene from ODC Tooling and Molds, Michael Hahn of the Tri-Mach Group Inc., Harold Albrecht, Member of Parliament for Kitchener-Conestoga, Art Sinclair from the Greater KW Chamber of Commerce and...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada