Canada looks to women to bolster trades amid post-pandemic labor
shortage
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[July 29, 2021] By
Julie Gordon
OTTAWA (Reuters) - A shortage of skilled
workers is intensifying in Canada, potentially threatening the pace of
the economic recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic, and that has
policymakers looking at a largely untapped market for new construction
workers: Women.
But attracting and retaining women in the skilled trades has long proven
difficult, with tradeswomen and advocates citing challenges balancing
childcare and on-site work, the stubborn sexism still ingrained in some
workplaces, and a lack of opportunities for women to get a foot in the
door.
Vanessa Miller was a young single mom when she decided to scrap
university for welding. She got her journeyperson ticket and became a
rarity in Canada: a woman with her own welding rig, a truck kitted out
with all the equipment needed to do big jobs.
"Every time you go to a different job and nobody knows who you are, you
have to prove yourself," she said, speaking from her home in Regina,
Saskatchewan. "It's still difficult to break into the industry, it's
still very male dominated."
Canada, like other developed nations, is facing a shortage of skilled
trade workers just as a pandemic stimulus-backed building boom gets
underway. At the same, more women than men remain unemployed because of
the pandemic, and about 54,000 women have left the labor force since
February 2020.
The gap between women's labor force participation and men's costs the
Canadian economy C$100 billion ($79.3 billion) each year, said Carrie
Freestone, an economist at RBC.
"Obviously skilled trades are a good opportunity," Freestone said.
In its latest budget, Canada's Liberal government pledged C$470 million
($373.2 million) to support the hiring of new apprentices for the most
in-demand trades. Companies that hire women, Indigenous people and other
minority groups get double the funding.
But women working in the trades and union leaders say it will take more
than just money to get more women in the trades.
"We're doing the work to mentor tradeswomen, to build our supply of
under-represented groups," said Lindsay Amundsen, director of workforce
development at Canada's Building Trades Unions. But she said there
should be quotas on major projects to ensure women get hired.
Canada has suggested quotas for certain groups - like women and
Indigenous people - on major projects that get federal support, but it
is up to the provinces to set them, a spokesperson at the infrastructure
ministry said.
RETENTION WOES
More than a decade ago, the province of Newfoundland and Labrador
realized that efforts to get women more interested in the trades were
working, but few were sticking with it.
[to top of second column] |
Millwrights Cassandra Whalen (C), Della Ryan and Amanda Reese pose
outside Carpenter Millwright College in Paradise, Newfoundland and
Labrador, Canada in this undated handout photo. Kassondra Barry
Photography/Handout via REUTERS.
The province funded the Office to Advance Women Apprentices (OAWA) to connect
tradeswomen with employers and also set hiring quotas for women and other
under-represented groups, like Indigenous people, on major projects.
By 2017, about 14% of construction tradespeople working in Newfoundland and
Labrador were women, far above the national average of 3-4%, though some
barriers remain.
When journeyperson millwright Cassandra Whalen landed in remote Voisey's Bay,
Labrador for a recent job, she discovered there was no safety equipment in her
size on site.
"I needed a respirator, I needed gloves and I needed a harness, none of which
they had in size small," she said. "They had to be flown in."
But Whalen loves her work, and says union advocacy has made the industry more
inclusive.
One of the unions leading the charge is UA Canada, which pays up to 24 weeks
salary to pregnant members unable to work due to safety risks. They also pay a
top-up for both men and women who take parental leave after a baby is born.
"I really think it does help with the retention for sure," said Alanna Marklund,
a national manager at UAC who is also a journeyperson welder.
But childcare continues to be an issue for many tradeswomen. Several tradeswomen
interviewed by Reuters said they depended on family members or spouses to help
care for young children.
Maggie Budden, a journeyperson ironworker, ended up taking a job in a bank after
her children were born. "Unfortunately with construction you need to travel and
I could not do that with my daughters," she said. She now runs the newest branch
of OAWA, in Cape Breton.
Daniella Francis was living in Ontario when she started considering the trades,
but she couldn't find any programs for women in her province. She ended up
moving her entire family to Alberta and is now an apprentice plumber.
"There needs to be more options," she said, adding however: "I would say, as a
woman, don't be afraid to go into the trades. Things are changing."
($1 = 1.2594 Canadian dollars)
(Reporting by Julie Gordon in Ottawa; Additional reporting by Allison Lampert in
Montreal; Editing by Andrea Ricci)
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