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Omar Yaqub

Information for Employers - 0 views

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    List of AE&I publications on immigrants
Omar Yaqub

Help for employers : Alberta, Canada - Immigration - 0 views

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    g of A : Help for employers
Omar Yaqub

'Glory' days return for Alberta jobs - 0 views

  • Alberta's labour market caught fire in June.The province added a whopping 22,000 jobs in June from the previous month -the largest gain since May 2006 and the second month of growth in a row, according to Statistics Canada figures released Friday.Because 27,600 more people were looking for work -mostly newcomers from other provinces -the unemployment rate still rose 0.2 percentage points from May to 5.6 per cent.
Omar Yaqub

Alberta's job growth leads nation - 0 views

  • Alberta's job growth leads nationWorkforce up 2.8% in a year provincially, but only 1.6% nationally
Omar Yaqub

Gaping holes in our knowledge of the labour market - The Globe and Mail - 0 views

  • Predicting labour trends is notoriously tricky, partly because the economy sways and shifts much more quickly than the education or immigration systems that supply many workers. Sometimes, events can change overnight – one tsunami in Japan, for example, can cause countries around the world to re-think investment in nuclear industries.
Omar Yaqub

Job seekers heading back to Alberta - The Globe and Mail - 0 views

  • Job seekers are flooding back to Alberta after a two-year lull, lured by a resurgence in the oil patch and growing hiring demands. Alberta saw a net inflow of 5,300 people from other provinces in the first quarter of 2011 -- its highest rate of interprovincial migration since the first quarter of 2006, according to Statistics Canada preliminary population data reported Wednesday.
  • The province saw steady inflows of workers from other parts of Canada between 1995 and 2009, but saw outflows in 2010 for the first time in 15 years.
  • Alberta’s gain appears to have come from Atlantic Canada and other Prairie provinces. Newfoundland recorded a net outflow of 500 people and Nova Scotia lost 1,000 to interprovincial migration in the first quarter.
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  • Manitoba lost 1,000 to other provinces, while Saskatchewan lost 600 people. It was the booming Prairie province’s first quarterly net outflow of people to other provinces since the third quarter of 2006.
Omar Yaqub

Calgary Economic Development campaign aims to attract people and business - 0 views

  • the purpose is to attract people and prospective employees “and to address our longer-term workforce needs.”
  • The second reason is to further develop and diversify our business base in a more sustainable way to complement our strength in areas like energy,
  • third reason, particularly coming back from our research, is to highlight how this city has evolved from an arts, a culture and a cosmopolitan global business centre perspective
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  • campaign will focus on recruiting qualified workers and targeting sectors key to Calgary’s sustainable growth, such as finance, technology, and logistics. Outreach to these sectors and people will occur in four Canadian markets: Toronto, Halifax, Ottawa and Montreal
  • campaign was created by Calgary Economic Development with support from Mayor Naheed Nenshi and more than 30 investors from the private sector
  • outreach to those markets will be through the use of various tactics such as advertising and social media to create awareness about Calgary as a centre of business and career destination. There will also be a “heavy focus” on media relations and public relations
  • total budget for the 10-month national campaign is $1.2 million.
  • More than 50 per cent of the funding has been raised through partnerships with the private sector
Omar Yaqub

The growing US jobs challenge - McKinsey Quarterly - Economic Studies - Country Reports - 0 views

  • The growing US jobs challenge It could take more than five years—longer than after any postwar downturn—to replace the millions of jobs lost to the 2008–09 recession. How can the US rev up its job creation engine?
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    The growing US jobs challenge It could take more than five years-longer than after any postwar downturn-to replace the millions of jobs lost to the 2008-09 recession. How can the US rev up its job creation engine?
Omar Yaqub

Short Term - 0 views

  • Services sector downsized 13,000 to15,000 positions during the downturn - more than any other secto
  • Approximately 70% of the Services sector's workforce is located in the field where workers need to be prepared to work in all weather conditions and may be away from home for long periods of time.
  • Oil and gas key operating areas tend to be in hard-to-recruit locations such as remote areas and regions with low population densities.
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  • Much of the Services sector work is seasonal and activity levels fluctuate with oil and gas prices.
  • The Services sector is a preferred labour supply source for the Exploration and Production and Oil sands sectors that often hire full-time employees from its contracted workforce.
  • The Services sector may be facing a labour shortage, but the industry as a whole will soon have to adapt to a much tighter labour market. During the downturn, cost management was the primary concern for the industry. In the latter half of 2010, attraction, retention and workforce development returned as key priorities for many oil and gas companies. Industry recovery has also increased the challenges around managing compensation and benefits expectations as well as employee turnover/retention. These workforce issues continue to escalate in today's market. For many companies, managing labour issues will be key to sustaining growth.
Omar Yaqub

Let foreign workers stay, Alberta urges - 0 views

  • With another boom just around the corner, it’s time to shift away from reliance on temporary foreign workers and concentrate on immigration, says Thomas Lukaszuk
  • 280,000 new immigrants this year
  • 360,000 temporary workers in the country.”
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  • At the height of the boom in 2006, Alberta had more than 60,000 temporary foreign workers — the highest per capita of any province. Many worked on oilsands projects but a lot of them left when the economic downturn hit in December 2008.
  • Under the new rules, temporary foreign workers can spend a maximum of four years in Canada, and then must leave for four years before re-applying for another four year term. Previously, a permit issued for two years was renewable several times if the employer could prove the worker was needed.
  • At the height of the boom in 2006, the construction industry brought in about 7,000 skilled tradesmen, “but these days, that’s down to almost zero,” Staples said.
  • Gil McGowan, president of the Alberta Federation of Labour
Omar Yaqub

EFFECTS OF DIVERSITY ON BUSINESS PERFORMANCE: REPORT OF THE DIVERSITY RESEARCH NETWORK - 0 views

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    This article summarizes the results and conclusions reached in studies of the relationships between race and gender diversity and business performance carried out in four large firms by aresearch consortium known as the Diversity Research Network. These researchers were asked bythe BOLD Initiative to conduct this research to test arguments regarding the "business case" fordiversity. Few positive or negative direct effects of diversity on performance were observed. Instead a number of different aspects of the organizational context and some group processes moderated diversity-performance relationships. This suggests a more nuance
Omar Yaqub

Advanced Education and Technology - Campus Alberta Planning Framework - 0 views

  • How many international students attend post-secondary education in Alberta? International students make up about 5% of enrolment at Alberta’s publicly funded post-secondary institutions – about 11,800 students in 2008-09. International students also make up a significant proportion of the graduate student population.  In 2008-09, almost 19% of Master’s Degree and almost 30% of PhD students were international students
Omar Yaqub

The Economists - The Globe and Mail - 0 views

  • biggest growth in employer demand has been for basic labour or unspecified skills,
  • In 2000, 11 per cent of temporary foreign workers performed basic labour or unspecified skills; now 34 per cent of them do.
  • The temporary foreign worker program is really about contracting out immigration," says Yessy Byl, a lawyer who volunteers with the Edmonton Community Legal Centre. “In fact the government is setting the stage for a bizarre non-immigration program because those workers can’t immigrate.”
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  • there’s a danger in allowing employers, alone, to define Canada’s immigration policy: Employers are increasingly looking for average workers, not skilled labour.
Omar Yaqub

Working Temporarily in Canada: Who Can Apply - 0 views

  • most cases you will need a written job offer or contract of employment from your employer in Canada before you apply for a work permit. You will also need to provide evidence that you meet the requirements of the job offer.
  • need a positive labour market opinion (LMO) from Human Resources and Skills Development Canada (HRSDC)
  • most cases, if you need a work permit, you will also require written confirmation from HRSDC that your employer can hire a foreign worker to fill the job. This is called a positive labour market opinion or LMO. It is up to your employer to get this written confirmation.
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  • After your employer gets confirmation that you can be offered a job, the employer will send you the LMO confirmation letter. In some cases, you can submit your work permit application while you wait for the LMO
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Omar Yaqub

New online resource helps employers and HR professionals understand foreign-earned educ... - 0 views

  • A new tool will help employers and human resources professionals better understand academic credentials earned abroad. The online tool will improve the attraction and retention of newcomers which is an important part of addressing the province’s future labour shortage
  • Education Overview Guides are an online resource that explains how international education credentials compare to Alberta education credentials and standards. Employers, Human Resource professionals, potential immigrants, and recent newcomers can all benefit from understanding how foreign education credentials compare to Alberta standards.
  • For more information on the Guides, please visit the Education Overview Guides. For more information on Foreign Qualification Recognition and to see other resources, please visit Foreign Qualification Recognition or call 780–427-2655 (toll-free by calling 310–0000).
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