Dear Editor,
When Employment Minister Jason Kenney announced changes to the Temporary Foreign Worker Program (TFWP), he said migrant workers should be the last resort for businesses when hiring.
Some companies have denounced the minister’s reforms as being anti-business and will be harmed because of a lack of available Canadian workers.
But both government and businesses are skirting the real problem.
Let’s clarify straight away what the debate surrounding the TFWP is really about. This isn’t about Canada not having enough workers – not when 1.3 million citizens are unemployed. It is about Employment Insurance paying too many people not to work.
EI advocates claim there are no work opportunities. But, of course, we know that is not true. There are still thousands of temporary foreign workers filling jobs people on EI won’t do.
Ganong Brothers Ltd, a fourth generation family-owned chocolate business in St. Stephen, New Brunswick, once employed as many as 40 foreign workers. This year, it is reportedly about 25.
Ganong Brothers is not the only company bringing foreign workers into rural Atlantic Canada. In May, the Atlantic Provinces Economic Council, an independent think tank based in Halifax, released a report showing that in 2012 the total number of temporary foreign workers was 10,900 in Atlantic Canada. That’s three times as many as in 2005.
This number begs a question: Why are we bringing in thousands of foreign workers to provinces with high unemployment rates and high rates of repeat EI usage? Or put another way, why were 25 foreign workers getting jobs at Ganong when there are about 30,000 New Brunswickers collecting EI at any given month?
Ganong Ltd is not the only business having trouble finding workers. Another family-run New Brunswick company, Millennium Marine, is closing its doors and moving operations to Maine because the operator could not find workers willing to fill the jobs.
Owner Cory Guimon told CBC that seasonal jobs, subsidized by EI, were too much for his full-time jobs to compete with. He says Americans are now lining up for the work.
So what can be done to incentivize more Canadians to take these types of full-time jobs?
For starters, reform our Employment Insurance program. Maintaining the current EI system does nothing to solve the region’s high unemployment, high taxes or loss of young people to jobs out west.
Secondly, pay more for low-skilled work. Paying foreign workers less only drags down Canadians’ wages, resulting in fewer Canadians willing to work and fueling the need for additional cheap labour from abroad.
Finally, we need to improve our immigration system.
Rather than source temporary workers who leave after their work term, let’s reach out and support permanent immigrants who can stay and become an economic boost for Canada.
Canadian businesses know EI has perverted the labour market but haven’t wanted to discuss it. They now have an economic incentive to do so.
Instead of trying to save the TFWP, businesses should offer solutions on how best to fix EI. That would nicely align their interests with the interests of Canadian workers.