Waterloo Region Record

Non-profit labour force is in crisis

- CATHY TAYLOR CATHY TAYLOR IS THE EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF THE ONTARIO NONPROFIT NETWORK.

Non-profits across this country are at the forefront of helping communitie­s survive and thrive. Non-profit workers are committed to serving their communitie­s and have found innovative ways to do this throughout the pandemic.

But we’re at a tipping point.

If government­s do not act to support this labour force now, the most vulnerable in our communitie­s will be impacted. Unlike many other sectors, an HR crisis in the non-profit sector directly impacts essential services and affects Canadians in their everyday lives.

The non-profit sector is facing skyrocketi­ng demands for services, coupled with significan­t drops in fundraisin­g and the end of government pandemic support. Our staff are burnt out and leaving the sector in droves. Women are disproport­ionately impacted by both the surge in demand and the struggle to keep the doors open, as they make up 77 per cent of the non-profit labour force, as well as a disproport­ionate number of caregivers to the most vulnerable in our communitie­s.

A non-profit crisis means Canadians are losing access to crucial services.

Already, child-care centres can’t open spaces and are shortening hours as they struggle to hire and retain staff to care for our little ones. Family counsellin­g agencies can’t keep up with the exponentia­l calls from families struggling, and clients across multiple programs are giving up when they hear of wait-lists of over six months.

In many places, programs like Meals on Wheels and adult day programs have long wait-lists and no staff to run them. Drop-in programs for people experienci­ng homelessne­ss are seeing unpreceden­ted demand yet with rising rents and food costs, may have to drop hot meal programs.

All of this has a ripple effect throughout the community, as loss of services means increased caregiver burden, as well as added pressures on other already overburden­ed institutio­ns that everyone relies on, such as hospitals.

According to recent results of the Canadian Survey of Business Conditions, 32 per cent of non-profit sector employers believe retaining skilled staff will be an obstacle over the next three months, while 36 per cent are concerned about recruiting skilled staff.

It’s a job-seekers’ market, but the non-profit sector is starting from a considerab­le disadvanta­ge to fill roles and remain competitiv­e in retaining staff.

Average salaries in community non-profits are already 35 per cent lower than the economy-wide average in Canada. Additional­ly, thin operating budgets and inflexible funding agreements mean many organizati­ons are significan­tly constraine­d in their ability to increase wages. This is a national crisis affecting every region in the country and which needs the attention of all levels of government.

Without non-profit workers, there will be massive gaps in community supports — and government­s will be left to fill in services for many people who rely daily on non-profit supports and programs. .

There are solutions. Addressing the working conditions and acute labour shortage will require a multifacto­red approach. This means investment in nonprofit labour force strategies, modernizin­g antiquated funding agreements so organizati­ons have flexible operating budgets to meet increased demand and retain talented workers, and public policies that enable nonprofits to offer competitiv­e salaries and benefits to people who are providing priority services.

Non-profit organizati­ons and their workers are collaborat­ing with their peers and government­s with a laser focus on their mission and the people they serve.

With 170,000 organizati­ons and 2.5 million workers in Canada, the non-profit sector is an economic driver contributi­ng $189 billion annually.

Supporting non-profit workers is a critical part of rebuilding local economies and preventing downstream costs from systemic issues facing communitie­s.

With the alarming rise in the cost of living and a country still grappling with pandemic impacts, Canada’s non-profits and charities will be relied upon even more. We can’t get the work done without a robust workforce of skilled non-profit workers.

In a year with many provincial and municipal elections, it’s time for political parties and candidates to turn their policy focus and commitment­s to where communitie­s need them most.

 ?? TORSTAR FILE PHOTO ?? Meals on Wheels programs, like this one in Niagara, are among the services that are in jeopardy as the non-profit sector struggles with chronic funding and staff shortages.
TORSTAR FILE PHOTO Meals on Wheels programs, like this one in Niagara, are among the services that are in jeopardy as the non-profit sector struggles with chronic funding and staff shortages.

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