February 4, 2020
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The Government of Ontario is taking action to attract more people to the skilled trades and to encourage employers to hire more apprentices. The province is facing a serious labour shortage, which has the potential to get progressively worse. On any given day, tens of thousands of jobs go unfilled and many of those are in the skilled trades.

As part of the government’s ‘Open for Business, Open for Jobs strategy,’ the Ministry of Labour, Training and Skills Development launched a marketing campaign to highlight good-quality, well-paying and flexible careers in the trades, under the slogan ‘Find a Career You Wouldn’t Trade.’

“We need to do a better job at enticing young people and their parents to the skilled trades,” said Minister Monte McNaughton.

The advertising campaign reflects the passion of real skilled tradespeople in their work environments. It features up-close footage of three skilled trades people with in-demand careers and high income potential: a tower crane operator, a steamfitter and an arborist.

The government is also investing approximately $75 million in three programs to expose high school students to the trades: $12.7 million in the Ontario Youth Apprenticeship Program, $42 million in the Specialist High Skills major program and $20.8 million in a pre-apprenticeship program.

“The reality is that the skilled trades offer exciting and challenging careers that often require solid math and problem-solving skills, and expose people to the latest technologies such as 3D printing and robotics,” said Minister McNaughton. “When it comes to opportunity, to earning potential, to having a chance to start your own business, the skilled trades come out on top.”

Over the first nine months of 2019, Ontario employers had, on average, 204,000 job openings across all occupations and industries. Of these, 13,000 were in the construction sector.

The ads will run online, in movie theatres and on Tim Hortons TV across the province.

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