Apprenticeship Training Programs at George Brown College
Apprenticeship
programs get $18M from province
From Toronto Star,
Apr. 13, 2004
Premier Dalton McGuinty's $18-million bid
to make Ontario's workforce a North American powerhouse won't be
enough to stave off a looming skilled labour shortage that has
dire consequences for the province's economy, critics warned today.
McGuinty committed the money to the province's apprenticeship
training programs during a news conference inside a cavernous,
state-of-the-art truck repair lab at Centennial College's School
of Transportation.
He said the 60,000 students enrolled each year in more than 130
different college apprenticeship programs still won't be enough
to compensate for a steadily growing number of retiring workers.
"People are retiring out of those programs at a rate that
is close to alarming," McGuinty said, surrounded by students
and a litany of machine parts, engine blocks and a half-disassembled
tractor-trailer.
"We feel a responsibility to work together with our colleges
and the private sector as well as labour to ensure we are going
to be able to satisfy the continuing demand for skilled workers."
An estimated 28,000 students learning everything from cooking
and cabinet-making to plumbing and heavy-duty automotive repair
will benefit from the money, earmarked for updated classrooms,
equipment and new training materials, McGuinty said.
The funding includes $9 million for the existing Apprenticeship
Enhancement Fund for upgraded training facilities, $5 million to
the Apprenticeship Innovation Fund for new curriculum and $3.6
million for the Pre-Apprenticeship Fund.
The labour market is predicting significant shortages of workers
across the country. Last year, the Conference Board of Canada forecast
a shortfall of nearly one million workers in skilled trades including
plumbing and construction within 20 years.
Census data released in 2003 showed that while the proportion
of university graduates increased by almost 52 per cent in a decade
and college graduates increased by almost 48 per cent, the proportion
of Canadians who earned a trade increased by only 13 per cent.
Political critics and industry stakeholders were less than thrilled
with Tuesday's news, calling it an effective cut in college funding
and too little to offset the critical shortage of skilled workers
in Ontario.
"If people think it's difficult to find an affordable plumber
now, just wait until 10 years from now," said Stuart Johnston,
vice-president of policy and government relations with the Ontario
Chamber of Commerce.
"If you have 30 plumbers in the neighbourhood, they're all
going to be competitive and you're going to have competitive rates.
If you have one plumber, guess what he's going to charge?"
Still, Johnston acknowledged the announcement as a positive start,
even if only as a sign the government knows the problem exists.
The chamber also released a study Tuesday that suggests more than
half of the province's skilled tradespeople are expected to retire
within the next 15 years.
In the survey, more than 41 per cent of chamber members said they
anticipate a skills shortage in their industry before the year
2010.
Rosario Marchese, the NDP's education critic, accused the Liberals
of disguising a spending cut as a funding increase.
The previous Conservative government spent $10.3 million on the
Apprenticeship Enhancement Fund in 2003 and budgeted $10 million
for 2004, while the Liberals are only allocating $9 million, he
said.
What's most troubling about Tuesday's announcement, he added,
is that the government doesn't seem to have much of a strategy
to deal with the shortage.
"They're just putting in money to fill in the blanks, as
it were. There's no plan."
Johnston said one problem the government needs to tackle is the
public perception that learning a skilled trade is a less valuable
form of education than a university degree.
"It's a huge stigma," he said.
"Part of this whole
exercise has to be education and awareness about the kind of living
people can make being that plumber or
that plastic welder or that RV technician, or you name it."
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