Women will get help to join the construction trades - Action News
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New Brunswick

Women will get help to join the construction trades

A new mentorship program is hoping to get more women working in construction trades.

Only 3% of apprentices are women in New Brunswick

A new program is being created to boost the number of female apprentices working in the province. Only three per cent of registered apprentices in New Brunswick are women. (Jason Franson/Canadian Press)

A new three-year program is hoping to increase the number of women apprenticing in the construction trades in New Brunswick.

The program will provide mentoring to women who need support in order to break into the non-traditional trades.

Hlne Savoie has been hired to co-ordinate the program, which is launchedby the New Brunswick Building andConstruction Trades Council and the Department of Post-secondary Education, Training and Labour.

Hlne Savoie says a new program will encourage more New Brunswick women to get involved in the construction trades. (Marc Genuist/CBC)
Savoie says only three per cent of registered apprentices in the province are women, despite making up more than half of the population.

She's looking at recruiting 15 to 20 women that she help as they go through the multi-year program of learning a skill and apprenticing with an employer.

"We're going to follow them for threeyears. We're going to give them extra resources, problem-solving situations and create a group where they can rely on each other and not only themselves," she said.

"We need to understand the limits and the challenges they face and how employers can better recruit them and keep them on."

Savoie says the women in the program will have access to other women in the trades to talk about frustrations and problems at work.

She says a lot of women are not interested in the trades because of problems on worksites but that can be fixed.

"A bit of bullying, a bit of sexual comments that you hear a lot and some women don't take it as welland some women are saying, 'I just need to have someone on the end of the line to call someone when i have a bad day,'" she says.

She says they are also looking at getting women to support each other.

"It's going to be a network of women working in non-traditional trade and we're going to do that with Facebook, with networking events, these girls will get an event every sixmonths to gather together," she says.

Savoiesays she hopes these women get through the training program and find employment, which will then allow them to go on to become mentors for the next cohort of women who want to enter the trades.

Savoie says she will also work with employers to look at ways to deal with respect in the workplace, sexism and how to make women comfortable in a non traditional environment.

'I love working with my hands'

Jessie Savoy is in her second week of training to become a boiler maker.

The new program is hoping to recruit 15 to 20 women that will go through a multi-year program of learning a skill and apprenticing with an employer. (Women's Network PEI)
She says as a childshe spent a lot of time in her dad's shop and likes making things out of metal.

"My father brought me up in his shop, welding, grinding, doing things like that and I found great comfort in it," Savoy said.

"Ireally enjoyed it. I love working with my hands."

She saysher dad and her brother are also boiler makers and she's not afraid of taking up the challenge.

"I know that there are some difficulties that women run into in the workplace and my hope is that being part of this program will help fix some of those problems. she says.

She's looking forward to having an access to a mentor. She says she hopes to find work in New Brunswick and hopes that her boyfriend will as well since he's also in the building trades.

Kim Blyth, the assistant business managerfor the International Brotherhood of Boilermakers, Iron Ship Builders, Blacksmiths, Forgers and Helpers, Local 73,says with the number of trades people retiring over the next fiveyears there will be many opportunities for women to find work.

He says boiler makers can make $36 an hour plus benefits and expenses.