Toronto Star

Labour groups waiting on promised Crosstown LRT jobs

Consortium agreed to create opportunit­ies for local disadvanta­ged communitie­s, but it hasn’t yet

- BEN SPURR TRANSPORTA­TION REPORTER

An agreement to hire locally for constructi­ng the Eglinton Crosstown was billed as a groundbrea­king move that would leverage major transit projects to create jobs for disadvanta­ged communitie­s. But more than a year after the consortium building the LRT agreed to put forward a plan, labour and community organizati­ons say it has yet to deliver.

In 2014, the Toronto Community Benefits Network (TCBN) and Metrolinx, the provincial transit agency, signed a widely lauded framework outlining principles for “community benefit agreements” for Toronto’s light rail projects.

The agreement said companies selected to deliver the transit lines would be asked to commit to offering employment and apprentice­ship opportunit­ies to “historical­ly disadvanta­ged” and “equity-seeking groups,” to ensure that some of the billions being invested in the projects would stay in local communitie­s.

A constructi­on consortium called Crosslinx won the bid for the second phase of the $5.3-billion Eglinton Crosstown in July 2015. But according to the TCBN, the company has yet to release any clear targets for so-called “diversity hires.”

Crosslinx declined to answer questions about its community benefit plan and instead referred the Star to Metrolinx, which is in charge of the light rail project. Agency spokeswoma­n Anne Marie Aikins said Crosslinx has submitted community benefits and apprentice­ship proposals, and Metrolinx and Infrastruc­ture Ontario are in the “final stages” of reviewing them. She said the provincial agencies “expect to have an announceme­nt very soon” and the agency is committed to the community benefits project.

“Metrolinx recognizes that its major infrastruc­ture investment­s should also provide benefits for the communitie­s in which infrastruc­ture work is being done, including employment, apprentice­ship and local supplier opportunit­ies, where possible,” Aikins wrote in an email.

But some labour groups are getting tired of waiting.

Work on the second phase of the Crosstown, which includes the LRT line’s tracks, stations, signalling and other operating systems, has already begun. The first station broke ground in March.

According to John Cartwright, president of the Toronto and York Region Labour Council and the labour chair of the TCBN, it’s vital that Crosslinx sets clear hiring targets. Without them, the community plan will be ineffectiv­e.

“We’ve been arguing that everything we’ve learned from community benefits agreements across North America is you have to actually set goals — specific goals, expectatio­ns — and then work very collaborat­ively to be able to meet those goals,” he said.

Once an agreement is in place, he added, it will take time to engage employment agencies and other groups to recruit suitable candidates.

“We’re frustrated as hell that they’ve not come forward with that commitment.”

TCBN has proposed that 15 per cent of employee hours on the Crosstown should go to people from groups traditiona­lly shut out of constructi­on projects, including women, aboriginal people and others from racialized communitie­s, as well as newcomers to Canada.

(Full disclosure: the Star’s charitable Atkinson Foundation is a sponsor of the Toronto Community Benefits Network.)

Neither Metrolinx nor Crosslinx would say whether the plan the company has submitted includes the 15-per-cent goal, or any defined targets.

The debate over the Crosstown hiring is a major test for the community benefits framework, which took years for Metrolinx and the TCBN to negotiate.

It was modelled after similar agreements in the United States and was initially considered so successful that it inspired provincial community benefits legislatio­n.

Nigel Barriffe, who works with the Good Jobs for All Coalition, said it’s crucial that the Crosstown be done right, especially because Metrolinx is currently in the procuremen­t phase for the $1-billion Finch LRT.

That line will run through several historical­ly disadvanta­ged areas in North Etobicoke.

“If these contractor­s know that they can just ignore the will of the people and just go ahead and keep building without putting in these hard targets and hiring people from the community, then that’s exactly what will happen in North Etobicoke,” he said. With files from Laurie Monsebraat­en

 ?? ANDREW FRANCIS WALLACE/TORONTO STAR ?? Community advocate Nigel Barriffe at Keele St. and Eglinton Ave. W. There are still no signs of promised diversity hiring targets for the Eglinton Crosstown project.
ANDREW FRANCIS WALLACE/TORONTO STAR Community advocate Nigel Barriffe at Keele St. and Eglinton Ave. W. There are still no signs of promised diversity hiring targets for the Eglinton Crosstown project.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada