Calgary Herald

Oilpatch companies get creative in bid to avoid layoffs

- GEOFFREY MORGAN

As oilpatch layoffs mount, Trilogy Energy Corp. has been able to retain its staff and cut costs at the same time.

This summer, management at the oil and gas producer asked employees to work a four- day week and apply for work share coverage, a form of employment insurance, through Service Canada. Trilogy confirmed its eligible employees recently received government approval for their work share compensati­on after applying back in May.

“Reducing hours, we thought, was a better alternativ­e than laying off staff,” Trilogy president and chief operating officer John Williams said.

The Calgary- based company, controlled by billionair­e Clay Riddell, took the same approach in the last oil price downturn, which began in 2008, asking employees to take unpaid Fridays off between the May and September long weekends, as the company adjusted then, as it is adjusting now, to the fall in oil prices.

According to Jim Fearon, vicepresid­ent with recruitmen­t firm Hays in Calgary, many oil and gas companies in the Canadian energy sector have taken the same approach as Trilogy to manage the commodity price collapse.

“The alternativ­e is that you don’t do anything and the only way to manage your employee costs is to cut head count — and that’s happened,” Fearon said, citing the thousands of layoffs at Canadian energy sector companies this year.

Fearon said some companies, which need employees in the office every day, have chosen instead to send employees home at 3 p. m. instead of 5 p. m.

The West Texas Intermedia­te oil price fell to a new six- year- low on Wednesday and closed at $ 40.80 US per barrel — down from roughly $ 60 US per barrel for much of May and June, and a long way from the $ 100 US per barrel price oil fetched a year ago.

“We’ve also seen other companies have a reduction in pay, say by 10 per cent, with the same hours but with the promise that when the market picks up at the other end, that they’ll reimburse them for that 10 per cent,” Fearon said.

He added that strategy has been effective so far in retaining employees, given the promise of a reward when oil prices and profits return.

Williams said the majority of Trilogy employees, who will return to full- time hours in a few weeks, “were very positive about” the company’s decision to reduce hours, “they said, ‘ I would much rather do this than lose my job.’ ”

Since the oil price rout began last summer, many large oil and gas producers based in Calgary have announced mass layoffs, including Suncor, Cenovus, Talisman and others. The oilfield services associatio­ns supporting those producing companies have predicted tens of thousands of layoffs as a result.

According to Trilogy’s most recent annual informatio­n form, the company employs about 190 people full- time and Williams said staffing levels have remained around that number.

Trilogy posted a $ 35 million net loss for the second quarter of this year.

 ??  ?? Trilogy Energy’s well site and sweetening facility. This summer, Trilogy has avoided layoffs by asking employees to work four- day weeks and apply for work share coverage, a form of employment insurance.
Trilogy Energy’s well site and sweetening facility. This summer, Trilogy has avoided layoffs by asking employees to work four- day weeks and apply for work share coverage, a form of employment insurance.

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