Alberta wants more control over Temporary Foreign Worker Program - Action News
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Alberta wants more control over Temporary Foreign Worker Program

Kyle Fawcett, Alberta's labour minister, is pushing Ottawa for more control over the Temporary Foreign Worker Program.

Kyle Fawcett, Alberta labour minister, says responsibility for TFWP should be shared with provinces

Alberta minister on temporary foreign workers

10 years ago
Duration 3:36
Kyle Fawcett is pushing Ottawa for more control over the Temporary Foreign Workers Program.

Kyle Fawcett, Alberta's labour minister, ispushing Ottawafor more control over the Temporary Foreign Worker Program.

Fawcettsays the province is in a good position to helpmonitorthe program to ensure it is not being abused and to impose appropriate penalties.

Temporary foreign workers filed at least 250 complaints across Canada about employers mistreating them last year, braving a system that critics say is designed to work against them.

Only three provinces Alberta, Saskatchewan and Newfoundland and Labrador routinely track complaints made by migrant workers.

"We have made a pitch to work co-operatively with the federal government," Fawcett said. "That pitch has met limited interest. I have had a conversation with [federal Employment] Minister [Jason] Kenney and expressed our desire to work co-operatively with him. I think he does recognize the unique circumstances of Alberta."

Those circumstances include a low unemployment rate.

Alberta has repeatedly found itself struggling with a labour shortage in low-skilled and high turnover industries.

The request comes afterKenney announced on April 24 that the government would be suspending the Temporary Foreign Worker Program for the fast-food industry.

Labour market needs

Earlier this month, a websitemapped government authorizations of temporary foreign workersaround the country up until the end of 2012.

The information was released by the federal Human Resources and Skills Development ministry under an access to information request.

It showed that contrary to claims by businesses that the program bolsters the workforce in rural or remote areas, the vast majority of temporary foreign workers were approved in the threemajor urban centres of Vancouver, Edmonton and Calgary.

In Calgary, 299 of the 718 businesses that received authorizations in that period were restaurants, pubs and fast-food outlets or 41 per cent.

"We do have 5,500 spots per year in the provincial nominee program, but we are seeing a backlog in that program now," said Fawcett.

"And we think we actually need to raisethat number so that we can actually get permanent foreign workers in here, because we know there is a need for this."

There are predictionsthat Alberta will need more than 25,000more workers over the next 10years in theoilsandsalone.

Fawcett said the Temporary Foreign Worker Program is one of the keys to the puzzle of solving that.

"Particularly for the three western provinces, which actuallyaccount for a significant portion of the temporary foreign workers," he said.

"It would allow us to meet our labour market needs while allowing some of the other provinces, that do have some challenges around their unemployment numbers and finding opportunities for those that arein their province, to have a program that meets thoseneeds."