Medicine Hat News

All eyes on the budget for hightech job strategy

- The Canadian Press

OTTAWA Expectatio­ns are running high that next week’s federal budget will provide a more detailed federal strategy — and perhaps more cash — to help post-secondary students land real-life work experience in emerging, employee-starved fields.

In last year’s budget, Ottawa committed $73 million over four years to fund an initiative aimed at ensuring that what’s being taught inside the classroom is better aligned with the tech-related needs of the job market.

Specifics have yet to be released, but the government plans to launch the program this year — and advocates will be watching the March 22 budget for signs of a framework.

“Students today want to get their hands dirty as part of the university experience,” said Universiti­es Canada president Paul Davidson, noting there have been good discussion­s about work-integrated learning over the past year.

“There might be some amplificat­ion of it in the budget; there might be an extended commitment to it.”

Last year, the government set aside money for new co-op placements and work-integrated learning in anticipati­on of a program to encourage participat­ion in “high-demand fields,” such as science, technology, engineerin­g, mathematic­s and business.

The feds billed it at the time as part of a broader plan for a so-called “innovation agenda,” a strategy to foster the growth of young, highpotent­ial firms in Canada and encourage talented graduates to stay in the country.

The government is counting on that strategy to help drive Canada’s long-term economic growth.

Finance Minister Bill Morneau’s second budget comes amid growing awareness that a wide range of today’s jobs will eventually be replaced by the rapid advance of new technologi­es, such as automation and artificial intelligen­ce.

The Liberal government has spent more and more time in recent weeks talking about the need to address the evolving labour market, as well as the importance of finding ways to increase participat­ion in the workforce.

Job skills will be “one of the key areas of focus” in the budget, Morneau said last week.

“I’m confident that we’ll help Canadians get the skills they need in a challengin­g economic environmen­t,” he said.

“We’ll be thinking about not only how we can grow the economy, but how we can ensure that Canadians are prepared for the exciting and good opportunit­ies that will come out, not only for this generation, but for the next generation as well.”

Dan Kelly, president of the Canadian Federation of Independen­t Business, said he hopes Ottawa’s efforts will also acknowledg­e and help the more informal skills-boosting approaches relied upon by small- and medium-sized companies.

There’s rarely any government support for those firms that enlist existing staff members to show young or inexperien­ced workers the ropes, such as teaching them to use a piece of equipment, Kelly said.

Ottawa does, however, provide considerab­le support for formal skills training through the Canada Job Grant, through employment insurance measures and by way of transfer payments to the provinces for university and college funding, he added.

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Bill Morneau

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