After years of working several unfulfilling desk jobs, B.C.鈥檚 Liz Barrett wanted a change.
She looked around and came across the Workplace Alternative Trades Training or 鈥淲ATT鈥 Program, a program run by the Western Joint Electrical Training Society and designed to get people through the initial barriers of learning a trade.
Getting into the course is competitive, but if you do, those enrolled can complete their initial safety courses for free and then be set up with the electrician union and job placement.
Within weeks, Barrett had found a placement with a Victoria electrician and was loving her position. She was a hard worker, biking to worksites with her tools in one backpack, and her lunch and a change of clothes in another.
The position was part of her electrician apprenticeship 鈥 which usually lasts four years and is split between work periods and studying for school.
Then after around a year, Barrett got pregnant with twins, meaning she had to go on maternity leave earlier than she would have wanted. After giving birth, Barrett planned to stay on maternity leave for a year and then return where she left off with her apprenticeship.
But 21 months after her twins were born, and 27 months after she went on maternity leave, Barrett still hasn鈥檛 been able to return to work because she can鈥檛 find any child care.
She鈥檚 been trying for months to find a space, but the race for child-care spots in Greater Victoria is competitive. The opportunities are even tighter because of the nature of trades work, where Barrett would often have to be on-site for 7 a.m., which rules out a lot of daycare centres that open later.
鈥淚 haven鈥檛 ever talked to like an employer about, 鈥楬ey, can I start later?鈥 because I don鈥檛 want to be that person that gets quote unquote, special treatment, even though it鈥檚 not, it鈥檚 just the only way you can make something work because of the situation. It鈥檚 brutal out there. I phone all the time. And I鈥檓 like, 鈥業s there any movement? Is there any movement?鈥 And nobody really seems to have any.鈥
That slow culture change is another problem that鈥檚 plaguing an industry that is 鈥渢ortuously inflexible,鈥 according to Nick Black, a carpenter and owner of Cavetto Carpentry.
Black鈥檚 company is a small, four-man team and has been looking to expand but is struggling to find a 鈥渦nicorn,鈥 his term for a trained apprentice who鈥檚 ready and available to work.
鈥淭he trades have notorious negative sides to it, that are kind of stigmatized right now. I think a lot of people have this standard view of the trades, which isn鈥檛 great. But I think the trades are also very, very slow to change and it just can鈥檛 afford to do that anymore. The whole industry needs to really modernize and update because we鈥檙e not just competing with each other for labour, we鈥檙e competing with every other industry that has made those changes.鈥
Black says a number of problems plague the trades, including kids being turned off them by parents and schools when they鈥檙e young, and companies who take on apprentices but use them for cheap labour instead of proper learning opportunities. Added to that are the child-care issue, pay, as well as a lack of affordable housing crisis, parking at worksites and a lack of benefits.
鈥淚 think on one end, our hand and the industry鈥檚 hand is being forced because just otherwise people just aren鈥檛 going to do it,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e have to bend over backward for our people. But also, I think that鈥檚 the right way it should be.鈥
Black said he鈥檚 been looking for a benefits package for his team, but it鈥檚 hard to manage the overhead with such a small team.
On child care, Black suggested small contractor companies should band together and establish a child-care facility for their members, one that would offer cheap spots that work with the typical schedule of a tradesperson. That would be an innovative solution but a complicated one to get running, admitted Black.
In the meantime, the shortage of workers is only set to increase.
A Royal Bank of Canada report released in September 2021 forecasted that 700,000 tradespeople out of the four million working in Canada would retire by 2028. That combined with flawed recruitment means Canada will face a shortage of at least 10,000 workers in every nationally recognized Red Seal 鈥 a national trades certification 鈥 trade by 2026.
That鈥檚 hurting businesses.
A survey conducted by Canadian Manufactures and Exporters of over 500 manufacturers found that over the past year (the report came out in October 2022), 62 per cent of manufacturers had lost or turned down contracts and faced delays due to a lack of workers, leading to $7.2 billion in lost sales and penalties for late delivery. Meanwhile, 43 per cent of companies had postponed or cancelled capital projects because of labour shortages, leading to $5.4 billion in lost investment.
But it also means people like Barrett are being held back or in other cases left out entirely.
鈥淚 finished one of my years of schooling when I was around 32 weeks pregnant. So I鈥檓 ready to go back to work and build up my hours.鈥
At the beginning of 2022, the federal government announced nearly $1 billion annually in apprenticeship supports through grants, loans, tax credits. But Black says there needs to be a societal shift if the shortage of tradespeople is going to be properly addressed.
鈥淭here needs to be that shift in mentality in the public as well, that the trades are needed and something to be respected, not like, 鈥極h, you鈥檙e, a lower class of person.鈥 Well, you hired us to help you and that鈥檚 what we鈥檙e here to do. You need us, the world needs trades. They need craftsmen that can do this stuff, and do it well.鈥
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