Workforce Expansion and ImprovementThe shortage of skilled workers is unquestionably one of themost important challenges faced by Edmonton industry. Moreover,demographic forecasts indicate that today's acute labour shortageswill only become worse without strategic initiatives to grow ourworkforce through immigration and increased participation ratesfrom under-employed segments of society. Increased productivityand innovation within organizations are also part of the long-termsolution.EEDC's Edmonton Workforce Connection program continues tostrategically implement practical initiatives, in conjunction withindustry and other levels of government, to address regionallabour challenges. These initiatives will continue to be focused onbusiness development (primarily through improved productivityand innovation), labour retention and labour attraction.
Workforce DevelopmentThe shortage of skilled workers was unquestionably the mostimportant challenge faced by Edmonton industry in 2008. Inits third year, EEDC's Edmonton Workforce Connection (EWC)program continued in conjunction with industry and governmentto address regional labour challenges. EWC worked with industrystakeholders, immigrant-serving agencies, the City of Edmonton,educational institutions and Alberta Employment and Immigrationto launch the Edmonton Region Immigrant Employment Council.This organization was created to help address the underemploymentof skilled immigrants in the region.EWC also provided new opportunities for businesses and workersto connect. These included developing the Employers of Choicewebsite to highlight local employers, creating a link to WOWJobs that enabled companies to advertise job opportunities, andconnecting Edmonton employers to university career centresacross Canada.EWC has a new name - EEDC's Workforce Development Program- and new challenges. The focus of the program will be optimizingthe labour force to address a growing skills shortage that isdriven by an aging population, competition, innovation and newtechnologies. Alberta employers are reassessing their needs andthe future of their businesses in light of the economic slowdown.EEDC will continue to need blue and white-collar workers who areemployed to their maximum capacity to rebuild the economy.
Productivity & InnovationIn 2008, EEDC made a strategic decision to be a leader inpromoting greater productivity through innovation in the Edmontonregion.In collaboration with the province and cities across Alberta, EEDChosted Innovative Manufacturing Works tours in Edmontonin October 2008. Thirty industry representatives visited threeEdmonton-area manufacturers, which are focused on continuallyrefining their processes to achieve peak efficiency. Events such asthese improve public awareness of the capability of local industryand encourage other firms to adopt be
The reaction was that Edmonton's southern "partner" in the oil industry -Calgary -began to attract the head offices of various oil companies, and consequently outside business interests, including American ones.
In the new global economy, however, Edmonton is developing a reputation as the centre of other industries -industries that cannot necessarily be physically located within the downtown core.
David Whitson, a political science professor at the University of Alberta, notes that Edmonton has started to become a high-tech hub, including the pharmaceuticals industry.
The city also has a sterling reputation as a centre for higher education and the sciences, including an excellent, internationally recognized university, which includes a worldrenowned nanotechnology institute, and a smaller, newly named university -MacEwan -whose reputation is growing.
The result will be more people outside of the city centre during working hours, people who return to suburbia afterwards.
WorkforceEEDC's workforce development program continued forits fourth year in 2009. With industry, education andgovernment partners, EEDC addressed regional labourchallenges and helped to plan for anticipated increases in thedemand for skilled labour in 2010. The program supportedthe Edmonton Region Immigrant Employment Council, whichhelps immigrants gain experience working in Canada andprovides tools to help them find meaningful employment.Workforce development created opportunities for businessesand workers to connect through its enhanced web presenceat edmonton.com. The site informs employees aboutliving, working and educational opportunities in Edmonton.Employers were connected with programs designed toassist under-employed and unemployed segments of thelocal workforce. To address higher rates of unemployment,information was provided on how to access employmentopportunities in the Edmonton region.
Productivity & Innovation
Productivity improvements within the Edmonton regioncontinue to be a major focus for EEDC. Manufacturersand producers are experiencing increased internationalcompetition. With partners including the Government ofAlberta, we offer industry the opportunity to reviewbusiness processes, product improvements, evaluatenew markets, reinvent business models and explore newtechnological innovations.EEDC was actively involved in producing Reaching NewMarkets, a seminar that provided insights into new waysof growing business during challenging times. As part of aleadership development series, EEDC sponsored At the Speedof Trust by Stephen M.R. Covey at the Shaw ConferenceCentre in June. EEDC co-ordinated two best practicesmissions to Ontario in which corporate participants wereexposed to world-class manufacturers that have made greatstrides in productivity improvements.EEDC supported the heavy oil industry's National Buyer/SellerForum, which attracted 650 delegates from around the world,providing local companies the opportunity to sell into thein
Many immigrants educated overseas can face a complex and lengthy process when trying to get their foreign-earned qualifications recognized. Progress means a shorter and simpler path," said Thomas Lukaszuk, Minister of Alberta Employment and Immigration
The biggest impact a planning school would have is bringing a good brain trust of urban designers to Edmonton, and getting people to talk about planning in a more serious manner,
Currently, budding urban planners must leave Edmonton in order to continue their education. That’s what happened to urban planner and transit advocate Brian Gould. He left over two years ago to get his masters in urban planning at the University of California, Berkeley, and now lives in Vancouver. The 24-year-old helped establish the Transit Riders Union of Edmonton (TRUE), and wrote on transit issues for a local daily.
“Edmontonians being trained in the city, that’s a benefit right there,” he says, “but there’s also a steady stream of free work coming out of studio projects.”
Campus Philly is a nonprofit organization that fuels economic growth by encouraging college students to study, explore, live and work in the Greater Philadelphia tri-state region.
From Consideration To Integration
FC2I Steering CommitteeAn environmental scan of the International Engineering Graduate experience before immigration and once in Canada
lists all of the various provincial and federal economic development grant opportunities. This document was compiled by Alberta Finance and Enterprise but it hasn't been updated since November of 2010. I had that it was more up-to-date.
There were two fields of study (life sciences and computer, mathematics and physical sciences) that accounted for the highest proportions of doctoral graduates who left Canada for the United States. The vast majority of doctoral graduates in both fields had a job waiting for them in the United States.
factor most commonly cited for attracting doctoral graduates to the United States was the quality of the research facilities or the commitment to research
it's the sector in which the government
has most directly intervened -- health care -- that has maintained the most
robust job growth over the past two years, adding 20,000 new jobs in November
alone.
it is harder to avoid
the notion that a lot of those old jobs simply weren't adding much to the
economy
The story runs as follows. Before
the financial crash, there were lots of not-so-useful workers holding
not-so-useful jobs. Employers didn't so much bother to figure out who they
were. Demand was high and revenue was booming, so rooting out the less
productive workers would have involved a lot of time and trouble -- plus it
would have involved some morale costs with the more productive workers, who don't
like being measured and spied on. So firms simply let the problem lie.
Then came the 2008 recession, and it was no longer possible to
keep so many people on payroll. A lot of businesses were then forced to face
the music: Bosses had to make tough calls about who could be let go and who was
worth saving.
Note that unemployment is low for workers with a college degree,
only 5 percent compared with 16 percent for less educated workers with no
high school degree. This is consistent with the reality
that less-productive individuals, who tend to have less education, have been
laid off.)
rise of a large class of "zero marginal product workers," to coin a
term. Their productivity may not be literally zero, but it is lower than the
cost of training, employing, and insuring them.
But there's good reason to believe that
the labor market won't be keeping pace. Rather than an aberration, high
unemployment may be an enduring feature of the United States' economy.
Even if the December rate of job
creation continues, it will be 2014 before unemployment is down to 5 percent.
NorQuest College has decided to develop more extension courses, outside the provincially funded system, as a way to cope with uncertain provincial budgets.
Health and business will be the primary areas of growth,
The main thing we talked about yesterday at the ONEdmonton forum was economic development. In addition to breakouts and other discussion, we had two informative presentations that I hope to blog about over the next while. In her presentation on Diversifying Edmonton’s Economy, Tammy Fallowfield, EEDC’s Executive Director of Economic Development, touched on shifting the “Alberta Advantage”. Here’s what her slide said:
Remain relatively low tax
Not a low cost environment
Not a surplus of labour
Not a currency ‘bargain’
How about our labour force? All across Canada the population is aging, and that (along with our very low fertility rate) is going to lead to labour shortages. Here’s a graph from Alberta’s Occupational Demand & Supply Outlook, 2009-2019 (PDF), that shows this trend for our province:
There are many consequences as a result of this trend, not the least of which is Alberta’s challenge to attract and retain labour. Our taxes will likely also be impacted – an older population means higher costs for health care, and a slow growing labour force means a slow growing tax base.