B.C. ski resorts struggle to find staff amid foreign worker visa delays - Action News
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British Columbia

B.C. ski resorts struggle to find staff amid foreign worker visa delays

The Canadian Ski Council is calling on Ottawa toextend working holiday visas for visitors who are still in the country.

About one-third of positions might remain vacant this season, according to the Canadian Ski Council

Big White currently has less than half the amount of staff they require to run the resort. (Brady Strachan/CBC)

As COVID-19 restrictions lift and travel picks up, the ski industry is anticipating a busy season ahead.

But it could feel uncomfortably busyif Canadian ski resorts continue to have difficultiesfinding staff to operate the chairliftsand flip burgers in their mountaintop restaurants.

According to the Canadian Ski Council (CSC), up to 30 per cent of job vacancies at ski resorts across the country could remain empty by the time ski season hits.

The critical lack of workers prompted CSC president Paul Pinchbeck to send a letter to Canada's ministers of economic development andimmigration,calling on the federal government toextend working holiday visas for visitors who are still in the country, and whose visas are set to expire between now and the end of the ski season. The letter asks that the government grant an extension until May 1, 2022.

The working holiday visa is a temporary work permit offered to young people from participating countries to work in Canada for either 12 or 24 months.

Pinchbeck also requested the governmentallocate more resources to process new visa applications.

Big White says it needs hundreds more employees

At Big White Ski Resort, inKelowna, B.C., senior vice-president Michael J.Ballingal says whilethey typically require 600 to 700 staff to run the mountain, they onlyhave 250 confirmed employees for the upcoming season.

"In order to run [a ski resort] you need hundreds and hundreds of people. Right now we don't have that," he said.

Sun Peaks Resort, near Kamloops, B.C., is also short on staff, with about 100positions vacant and only about a month until the start of the season.

Christina Antoniak, director of communications, says about 50 per cent of their staff are typically from overseas, but that has fallen to about20 per cent this season.

At Revelstoke Mountain Resort, all the ski lift jobs have been filled, but roles infood, beverage, and hotel operationshave been challenging to fill, according to Peter Nielsen, vice-president of operations.

"It's quite unprecedented," he said.

Lindsay Bennett has run Dizzy's Ski Shop, a specialized boot-fitting store, in Big White for 17 years.He currently has fewer than half the boot-fitters he normally needs to run the shop.

Bennett says several prospectivestaff have had to cancel their plans to come to Canada to work for him after being unable to obtain a visa.

"These are people that have an incredible skill set that I need. When you find somebody and then you can't get them in it's really really frustrating," said Bennett.

"The ski industry in North America relies on internationals. When they can't come, the ski industry hurts. And right now, they can't come," said Bennett.

Lindsay Bennett assists a customer with a boot fitting at Dizzy's Ski Shop. (Brady Strachan/CBC)

Anthony Voiturin from France had secured a job at Dizzy's for the upcoming winter season. He was supposed to start on Oct. 12. He started the process of getting his visa in July, but has yet to receive it.

Voiturinis now debating whether he should stay in France for the winter.

Pinchbeck said in the CSC letter that if left unaddressed, the labour shortage could result in businesses operating at reduced hours or closing altogether.

With files from Brady Strachan