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Labour

Bronk recommends new approaches to recruitment

Don Wall
Bronk recommends new approaches to recruitment
FILE PHOTO - Ontario Construction Secretariat CEO Bob Bronk addressed the Ontario Building Trades conference in October.

The CEO of the Ontario Construction Secretariat (OCS) is calling for more and different types of resources to be applied to the recruitment of apprentices as the prime way to meet the dire needs in the sector.

Bob Bronk issued a year-end statement and offered analysis of what apprenticeship strategies are working well in the province and what is lacking.

He said the provincial and federal governments have caught on that major financial supports are needed to fund training, and that institutionally, the parallel training systems offered by colleges and unions are more than adequate to process the next generation of apprentices.

BuildForce 新澳门六合彩开奖结果2023 said in its latest construction forecast labour challenges could persist through to 2026 due to strong residential construction markets and a growing inventory of current and proposed major ICI projects.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 think the system is broke,鈥 said Bronk. 鈥淚 think Ontario has the best apprenticeship program system in North America.

鈥淏ut it鈥檚 all relative, right? I think where the issue lies is in recruitment. I think it鈥檚 the awareness. I think more resources need to be put into the recruitment stage.鈥

An OCS report from 2022 noted the unionized construction sector鈥檚 annual contribution to training was estimated to be just over $146.4 million in 2019. The total collective capital investment in 100 union locals or joint union-employer training facilities across Ontario between 2013 and 2019 was estimated at $325 million.

Bronk noted the unionized training centres often welcome non-union apprentices, meaning the large capital investments the unions have made benefit both non-union and union.

鈥淭he union sector is actually subsidizing the non-union sector,鈥 he said.

Last year, Bronk said, Minister聽of聽Labour, Immigration, Training and Skills Development Monte McNaughton took the big step of extending Training Delivery Agent status to several compulsory trade union training centres. But overall, Bronk asserted, whether training is delivered by colleges or unions, the support systems and funding in Ontario are superb.

鈥淭he provincial government has been very, very generous with their grants鈥or capital investment for training apprentices,鈥 Bronk said, adding the federal government with its Union Training and Innovation Program and others have been equally supportive.

鈥淚鈥檓 not aware of any training centre that says, 鈥榦h man, we need this money.鈥

鈥淚 don鈥檛 think that is the big issue.鈥

Bronk also gives a passing grade to the growing information networks that are being developed.

Examples of new or expanded websites include the new Skilled Trades Ontario (STO) site, the Building Trades Construction Training and Apprenticeship Ontario site and the website of the Ministry of Colleges and Universities. He also saluted STO for its new trade fairs.

鈥淭he ministry has really put a lot of attention on to trying to expose younger people to the trades,鈥 Bronk said. 鈥淒espite the fact that we had a pandemic, I think awareness is growing. More and more parents I think are open to the idea and looking at that possibility for their kids.鈥

Bronk said as a next step, recruiters need to find more sophisticated ways of reaching out. Potential recruits have to be able to actually see and feel and touch what that trade does and what equipment they鈥檙e using. Young people are often looking around for information on careers and have not settled on a plan in high school.

鈥淚t鈥檚 typical of the age group, when you鈥檙e in your late teens, you鈥檙e 19 or in your early 20s, you often don鈥檛 have a clue of really what you want to do.鈥

There needs to be more information on the different trades, on working conditions, on whether a trade is high or low tech, and whether they work indoors or out.

鈥淎ll those kinds of things are really important in terms of what you choose, and your personality,鈥 said Bronk.

鈥淏eing more informed before they get into it would increase retention rates.鈥
It goes without saying, Bronk said, that current efforts on multiple fronts to recruit from under-represented sectors such as women and Indigenous groups should continue to receive a high profile, and he praises initiatives from groups such as 新澳门六合彩开奖结果2023鈥檚 Building Trades Unions to collaborate with the federal Ministry of Immigration to expand efforts to bring in skilled workers who can contribute right away.

鈥淗aving more robust recruitment resources鈥ill greatly improve recruitment and also retention rates,鈥 he said.

Follow the author on Twitter @DonWall_DCN

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