Atlantic provinces reach out to expats - but what can they come home to?

sanctus

The Padre
Oct 27, 2006
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Ontario
www.poetrypoem.com
By James Keller

HALIFAX (CP) - A satirical website suggesting Nova Scotians living in Calgary suffer from a fictional medical condition is just one example of the myriad ways provinces in the region are trying to lure skilled expatriates home.

But for Atlantic Canadians who've made the move to places like oil-rich Alberta, such campaigns are met with a critical question: What is there to come back to?

The Nova Scotia website, for example, extols the good life back home - from reconnecting with families to the sound of the ocean lapping the shores - while offering links to job postings and promising a "growing number of opportunities."

However, Mike Gillis, originally from Antigonish, N.S., and now working as a plumber in Calgary, says he's looked for opportunities in his home province and they just weren't there.

"When you're trying to get ahead and trying to make a life for yourself and your family, Calgary is definitely a place where it seems easier," says Gillis, 32, who moved to Banff, Alta., a decade ago and then to Calgary in 2000.

"In Calgary there are a lot of opportunities, but in Nova Scotia . . . there's a fair number of plumbers and I don't really see the opportunities to further myself."

Nova Scotia is busy handing out incentives to attract financial services firms and information technology companies to the province. Recent successes include BlackBerry-maker Research In Motion's plan to build a technical support centre near Halifax, employing 1,200 people.

Gillis says that's good for workers already experienced in those fields, but it doesn't help people in other industries or those who don't have the option to retrain.

"In Calgary, anything that you want to do you can do," he says. "In Nova Scotia you can work there but you're more directed down certain roads."

The Atlantic provinces are desperate to attract new workers and stop people in the region from leaving.

Census figures for 2006 released last month suggest they're having trouble as the population across Atlantic Canada was virtually unchanged since 2001, dipping by about 1,000 people.

And despite unemployment rates above the national average, the provinces are facing a shortage of skilled workers, particularly in the trades.

In New Brunswick, the government has created a population growth secretariat, part of its plan to make the province self-sufficient within 20 years.

Initiatives include a new website with job postings and a program to match workers with employers, all the while reminding ex-New Brunswickers about the life they've been missing.

Newfoundland and Labrador, which is focusing on developing infrastructure to promote business, won't be counting on nostalgia to bring people back.

Human Resources Minister Shawn Skinner says Newfoundlanders already know what they've left behind - they just need good paying jobs.

"Anybody who's left Newfoundland and Labrador doesn't need to be told about the quality of life; they know what we've got here," says Skinner.

For example, when a mine in the central Newfoundland community of Baie Verte was recruiting workers recently, Skinner says dozens of miners eagerly returned from Alberta.

"They're out there now with good jobs, making good money - not as much as they were making in Alberta but good money, and now they have a quality of life."

David Chaundy, a senior economist with the Halifax-based Atlantic Provinces Economic Council, notes that there have been success stories in the region, especially in so-called knowledge-based industries.

But he says it's a long-term process that presents enormous challenges for the region, especially to ensure any new jobs actually stay.

"You have to realize that we are competing for labour in a market that's global and so you have to make sure you provide compensation and career opportunities that attract people," he says.

"It's not just people looking for a job or a higher paying job. Sometimes they're looking for career progression."

Chaundy adds that another obstacle is scale.

"When we've got fairly small economies compared to a bigger one that's growing more rapidly, opportunities for advancement are much stronger in those (larger) labour markets," he says.

There are more people in the city of Calgary, for example, than in the entire province of Nova Scotia, and Chaundy says smaller populations can't support as broad a range of opportunities and industries.

That's what's keeping Tara Power, originally from Truro, N.S., from moving home nearly 20 years after she first moved away for school.

Power, 38, now works as a clinical psychologist at the Tom Baker Cancer Centre in Calgary, and she says there just isn't work for her in regions with smaller populations.

"I can't get work in my field - I'm pretty specialized," says Power, who participated in a Nova Scotia government focus group about how to attract workers.

"There just aren't positions like that (in Nova Scotia)."

She has other friends in Calgary from Atlantic Canada who've tried to move home, even if it meant a lower pay cheque, without any luck.

"I have been terribly homesick," she says, adding that it could be years before she'll be able to return and scoop up one of a small handful of jobs that might fit her qualifications.

"I really, really hope that I can build a big enough name that I might be able to cobble something together in five or 10 years in Halifax."

Copyright © 2007 Canadian Press
 

jwmcq625

Nominee Member
Sep 14, 2007
95
1
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Speaking for New Brunswick, most of the jobs they can expect to come home to are called call centres (modern day sweat shops). The 450 employees of the call centre in Fredericton and Bathurst shockingly found how just how secure those jobs are when they showed up for work and the doors were locked with a sign posted stating; "Closed until further notice." When these same employees received their last pay checks they were minus any severance pay, s the employer does not feel the employees are entitled, even though the law states they are. By the way this company just recently got a grant from government to tie them over. I suspect this money quickly went south, along with the owners.

Come back to NB? Why would they even consider such a foolish move. Sure the politician put a positive spin on the energy sector especially in Saint John, NB, but it is my understanding that much of the work on the LGN Terminal at Mispec is being done Quebec workers. The last time Irving did a major expansion on the Saint John Oil Refinery most of the fabrication work was completed in fabrication shops in Quebec. A job that was advertised to last 4 years lasted only 18 months, because of the work completed outside NB. For local tradespeople, this job wound up creating very little work, and I suspect the speculated to be done in and around Saint John will also be done in Quebec. Why would tradespeople come back for short term work prospects?
 

Tonington

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 27, 2006
15,441
150
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Canadian Forces will be looking for trades in the near future. I think I heard recently that the average age of the workers in Halifax is 51.
 

jwmcq625

Nominee Member
Sep 14, 2007
95
1
8
I have a friend who is ex-military who retired after his twenty years as Heavy Equipment Mechanic (instructor). He is now back working at the trade as a civilian employee of the military, working in Alberta. After twenty years his meagre pension has left him in a position where he was forced to work as a Commissionaire in order to have a little extra with which to be able to visit his children and grand-children out West.

Young people joining the military have to understand that a military career is not just about having the government pay for your education, as there is always the chance you will be put into harms way.
 

TenPenny

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 9, 2004
17,466
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Location, Location
Sure the politician put a positive spin on the energy sector especially in Saint John, NB, but it is my understanding that much of the work on the LGN Terminal at Mispec is being done Quebec workers. The last time Irving did a major expansion on the Saint John Oil Refinery most of the fabrication work was completed in fabrication shops in Quebec.

Your understanding would be incorrect.
 

jwmcq625

Nominee Member
Sep 14, 2007
95
1
8
Since I have family who work in the trades and one just finished working at the LGN site, my understanding is correct. The same held true for the last major expansion at the Irving Oil Refinery in Saint John. This job was announced to be a 4 year project, but most of the fabrication work was done in fab shops out of province by Quebec workers, and the local tradespeople gained very little work from this project. Our tradespeople cannot work in Quebec so why should they get any work from our province. Quebec should be opening their borders to tradespeople who have inter-provincial certification as do all other provinces, but the reality is, they refuse to allow tradespeople from other jurisdictions to work in Quebec. We should reciprocate by not allowing their workers, or work to come into New Brunswick.