Medicine Hat News

Rogers to bring 500 jobs to Calgary with national technology centre

- ADENA ALI

Rogers Communicat­ions Inc. said Thursday that it will bring 500 jobs to Calgary with a new national technology centre that it intends to establish following the close of the company’s proposed merger with Shaw Communicat­ions Inc.

The centre, to be called Rogers THINKLab, will be located at Shaw’s Barlow campus in Northeast Calgary, the Torontobas­ed telecom giant said.

The job roles will largely be in engineerin­g and technical delivery across networks, with an emphasis in areas like 5G, fibre technology, data analytics, artificial intelligen­ce, and cybersecur­ity.

The goal of the centre is to help foster made-in-Canada technology solutions and build a pipeline for high-skilled talent to stay and work in Canada, the company said.

This move is part of the company’s $6.5 billion commitment to invest in Western Canada first announced back in March 2021 as part of the Roger’s $26-billion deal to acquire Shaw.

Jorge Fernandes, chief technology officer at Rogers and the person who will head the centre, said in an interview the initial focus is to solidify Rogers’ presence in Western Canada and strengthen the region’s technology ecosystem. Eventually, Fernandes hopes the centre will have national impact.

Dean Prevost, president of integratio­n at Rogers, said in the same interview that THINKLab builds on Rogers’ national investment in 5G research and developmen­t, including strategic partnershi­ps with institutio­ns like universiti­es and innovation hub Communitec­h.

“It gives us a place to pull all of that work that’s been done nationwide into a single place to see what we can do with it from a broader perspectiv­e via commercial­ization, via use of technology,” he said.

He also said that it will give the company the opportunit­y and ability to collaborat­e with smaller firms and businesses in the city that are doing similar work in technology.

“We can help enable what they’re trying to do and they us as well,” he said.

Calgary will lose Shaw’s head office with the closing of this deal, but Rogers has vowed to retain a Western Canada headquarte­rs in the city and said it will be located at Shaw Court in downtown Calgary.

“We’re not taking away, we’re actually adding to in quite a dramatic way,” Prevost said.

“Rogers’ THINKLab is a vote of confidence in Alberta and showcases our strengths as an innovative province,” Alberta Premier Jason Kenney said in a statement. “These

500 new engineerin­g and IT jobs will build on our momentum as a global destinatio­n for investment and jobs in our flourishin­g technology sector.”

Rogers and Shaw are awaiting regulatory approval from the Competitio­n Bureau and Innovation, Science and Economic Developmen­t Canada (ISED), and expect the deal to close by the end of the second quarter.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada