Toronto Star

Ten ways to create jobs for young Ontarians

- BRUCE DAVIS

In the aftermath of Jordan Manners’ death in 2007, the province and the Toronto public school board launched Focus on Youth to provide summer camps for thousands of children in Toronto’s toughest neighbourh­oods.

The defining strength of Focus on Youth was that it hired and trained 300 teenagers to implement the program.

Those summer jobs created short-term employment — but they also launched 300 young men and women into the world of substantiv­e, meaningful work. Most participan­ts said it was the best experience of their lives. Since then more than 2,000 teenagers have graduated from the program in Toronto alone and their personal stories are powerful.

We need that same kind of resourcefu­lness, discipline and dispatch to address the broader issues underlying Ontario’s growing problem of youth unemployme­nt and under-employment.

Anew report from the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternativ­es shows that, at 16.4 per cent, Ontario’s youth unemployme­nt rate is among the worst in Canada, worse even than most of the struggling “rust belt” states in the U.S.

It’s a complex problem to be sure, but one we are not powerless to address. Here are 10 ways we might begin to ease it. 1. Ten provincial ministries are involved in youth employment. They need to be co-ordinated and streamline­d, with a youth employment champion empowered to drive the issue across the government. 2. Youth apprentice­ship programs need to be reviewed and opportunit­ies for work in the trades expanded. Government procuremen­t, school constructi­on and transit constructi­on should all require organized labour and contractor­s to train and hire young men and women. Unions are showing leadership in this area but their programs need to be aggressive­ly expanded. 3. Focus on Youth should be expanded in size and scope and focused on hiring youth from priority neighbourh­oods. Hiring practices should be carefully monitored to ensure communitie­s are wellserved and genuine needs met. Focus on Youth costs a fraction of the Employment Ontario training grants now touted by the provincial government and the New Democrats.

A new report shows that, at 16.4 per cent, Ontario’s youth unemployme­nt rate is among the worst in Canada

4. Let’s use taxpayer money to stimulate greater community service and workplace experience. Turn the 30 per cent tuition credit created by the McGuinty government at a cost of $500 million a year into paid placements so that postsecond­ary students can work with nonprofit organizati­ons or schools or hospitals. Imagine launching 300,000 tutors in after-school programs at no incrementa­l cost to the government. 5. The Youth in Policing program needs to be doubled and the focus changed to allow 16-18 year olds to spend more time in the program before applying to police college. Use these funds to support hardto-serve or racialized youth. Working with the Somali community in Toronto, I have seen these youth shut out of policing. Why is there only one Somali-Canadian police officer in Toronto? We can do better. 6. The horseracin­g industry wants OLG subsidies? Let them hire youth from our towns and cities to clean their stables. Why doesn’t the Ministry of Natural Resources hire kids from TCHC? That money is already being spent, but spending it smartly will change lives forever. 7. Provincial suppliers and regulated industries and provincial transfer partners like school boards, hospitals, municipali­ties and post-secondary schools should be required by law to develop youth employment plans that clearly outline how they can hire and train more youth. This isn’t a set-aside to hire youth, but a requiremen­t to develop and submit realistic plans to the government. Private sector employers with more than 50 employees could also be mandated to develop these plans. 8. For smaller businesses, why not allow them to deduct a portion of each new young employee’s salary from their education property taxes? 9. Increasing Ontario’s minimum wage is important to support working families, but the province should maintain a lower minimum wage for teenagers to entice employers. 10. Ontario is currently facing a massive glut of trained but unemployed teachers. Create Teach for Ontario (T4O) to hire 1,000 recent graduates and place them in priority neighbourh­oods; this could be funded by enticing veteran teachers to take early leaving packages, which will create more jobs for young teachers.

None of these solutions is simple, but nor are they impossible. When we created Focus on Youth in six weeks in 2007 many said it couldn’t be done. We did it. And the Minister of Education at the time? Kathleen Wynne.

 ?? AARON LYNETT/TORONTO STAR ?? Members of the Youth in Policing program remove stolen bicycles from a dilapidate­d garage. The program would be more effective if it were twice the size and more focused on at-risk youth.
AARON LYNETT/TORONTO STAR Members of the Youth in Policing program remove stolen bicycles from a dilapidate­d garage. The program would be more effective if it were twice the size and more focused on at-risk youth.
 ??  ?? Bruce Davis is the President of Public Progress Inc. and the Gananoque Brewing Company. He is a former Chair of Toronto District School Board. Since 1997 he has hired more than two dozen young employees.
Bruce Davis is the President of Public Progress Inc. and the Gananoque Brewing Company. He is a former Chair of Toronto District School Board. Since 1997 he has hired more than two dozen young employees.

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