The Telegram (St. John's)

Go west and make big money

Increases in oil & gas sector announced

- BY LUANN LASALLE

Pipe fitters and plumbers in the oil and gas industry in Western Canada can expect higher salary increases this year than retail and hospitalit­y workers, says a new study.

The oil and gas sectors in Saskatchew­an and Alberta are expected to have the highest average salary increase at 4.5 per cent, up from 4.2 per cent last fall, the Conference Board of Canada said Tuesday.

Engineers and project managers as well as electricia­ns and welders are also in demand, said Ian Cullwick, the board’s vice-president, leadership and human resources leadership.

“Alberta and Saskatchew­an just have a huge demand for those skill sets,” he said from Ottawa.

Non-unionized salary gains are projected at three per cent nationally for 2013, with salary gains in the heavily populated provinces of Ontario and Quebec expected under that average.

Workers in hospitalit­y, tobacco and manufactur­ing industries can expect lower salary increases of 2.3 per cent and retail workers 2.2 per cent, down from 2.9 per cent and 2.6 per cent respective­ly.

“In hospitalit­y and retail, they have more transient workforces. They’ve got part timers and contract workers. They’ve got part-time workers that are students as well,” Cullwick said.

For unskilled and semi-skilled labour, he said, the implicatio­ns are higher levels of unemployme­nt and lower salary gains.

“You could argue it’s almost two divides,” he said, adding that there’s a “misalignme­nt” for producing specialize­d skills and trades versus general university programs that are “educating” but not necessaril­y developing skill sets.

For Quebec, the Conference Board projected salary gains to be below the national average at 2.7 per cent, while projection­s for Ontario and British Columbia are at 2.5 per cent.

“We don’t have the same boom that’s coming from the resource and energy sectors,” added Allison Cowan, senior research associate of compensati­on and industrial relations at the Conference Board.

Manufactur­ing continues to be challengin­g in Ontario and to some extent in Quebec, Cowan said.

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