LATEST NEWS: Skills Training
March 4, 2009
Manitoba looks to Iceland for temporary foreign workers
Agencies
An economic crisis in Iceland may result in more workers from the
country finding employment in Manitoba.
The province’s labour minister travelled to Iceland to assess the
feasibility of recruiting construction workers as temporary foreign
workers (TFW).
Iceland, with a total population and labour force of about 320,000 and
150,000 respectively, has always been a country with low unemployment
rates.
But since last October, when all three of the country’s major banks
collapsed, labour market conditions have changed rapidly.
“Unemployment in Iceland has always been low historically at around
one per cent” said Atli Asmundsson, Iceland’s consul general in
Manitoba.
“Now after the economic collapse, there is massive unemployment. It is
up to eight per cent and still rising.”
Unemployment is expected to reach at least 10 per cent or higher this year.
Labour leaders in Iceland have criticized the government’s lack of action.
In February, the Manitoba government sent a letter to Asmundsson
expressing an interest in working with his government on an initiative
to help unemployed skilled workers.
“Everyone in Iceland knows about Manitoba, so when the Manitoba
government learned about the hardships Iceland is facing, they wanted
to help,” explained Asmundsson.
“There is a labour shortage in many sectors in Manitoba, despite the
increase in unemployment in Canada as a whole.”
A recent Statistics Canada report stated that employment in Canada
decreased by about 129,000 in January, which has pushed the
unemployment rate up to 7.2 per cent.
The majority of the job losses were in the manufacturing sectors in
Ontario and Quebec.
In January, Manitoba’s unemployment rate was 4.6 per cent, the third
lowest in Canada behind Saskatchewan and Alberta.
Iceland’s Minister for Social Affairs Jóhanna Sigurdardóttir has
invited Manitoba’s Minister of Labour and Immigration to Reykjavik.
The trip is taking place between March 3 and 8.
“We are in the process of going to Iceland to see if the people they
have match what we need in Manitoba,” said Nancy Allen.
“This labour initiative may take various forms. We want to go to
Iceland and work with the Directorate of Labour to identify who is
unemployed and provide a process so they can come to Manitoba.”
The Manitoba Ministry of Labour is in the process of sourcing and
pre-screening employers, who must be able to demonstrate they have a
labour shortage in a specific trade.
The Iceland Directorate of Labour will identify and pre-screen
potential candidates.
“What is important is the principle of bringing people in through the
temporary foreign workers stream,” said Allen.
“If they chose to do so, they can go back to Iceland. But once they
are here and working, they can also move to the PNP, (provincial
nominee program) after six months. They can stay as landed immigrants,
if they have a permanent job offer.”
Allen said she has no problem with trying to fill vacant position in
Manitoba with Canadian workers, if they are willing.
“If they want to come here, sure,” she said.
“There is nothing stopping anybody from Alberta or Ontario from coming
to Manitoba to work. Anybody can come to Manitoba if they chose.”
As the economic crisis in Iceland intensifies more people are
considering working abroad.
Manitoba is one of the first places to be considered because the
province is home to the largest Icelandic community outside of that
country.
There are about 80,000 people of Icelandic descent in the rural
municipality of Gimli.
Asmundsson said that about 20,000 people of Icelandic decent lived in
Manitoba in 1911.
These people were part of a wave of immigration to North America
between 1875 and 1914.
During this period 20 per cent of Iceland’s population emigrated to
North America, with most of these people coming to Manitoba.
A volcanic eruption destroyed and poisoned most of the land.
The population is the main reason why Iceland has established a
consulate in Winnipeg and shares a special relationship with the
Manitoba government.
Thursday, March 05, 2009
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