News
News and information from and for Ontario’s construction industry
The Link2Build group publishes news and information about the Ontario construction industry daily. Check here for the latest in trends, developments and insight from a wide variety of contributors, and visit regularly for updated information.
How prompt payment and adjudication rules will impact relationships throughout the construction payment chain
Canadian construction unions unveil election website
Published October 8, 2019
A coalition of Canada’s construction unions has launched an election-information website.
Let’s Build Canada is a coalition of building and construction trade unions advocating for building a more resilient, sustainable and fair Canada. The group advocates for infrastructure built to withstand climate change, an economy which levels the playing field for all Canadians and a system built to train the workers of tomorrow.
Its members include the International Association of Sheet Metal, Air, Rail and Transportation Workers, the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Canada, the International Union of Painters and Allied Trades, the Ironworker Management Progressive Action Cooperative Trust, the Labourers’ International Union of North America, UA Canada/Canadian Piping Trades and the International Association of Heat and Frost Insulators and Allied Workers. Combined, the groups represent 300,000 workers in the building and construction sectors.
The coalition’s website, letsbuildcanada.ca, calls for action on three fronts. The first is to build new infrastructure throughout the country, and in particular infrastructure that can aid in the fight against climate change. According to the group’s website, Canada’s climate is warming at a rate of double that of the global average. Impacts are far-reaching. From 2000 to 2015, the costs from extreme weather events in Canada were greater than in all previous years combined. The costs will only get worse, rising from $5 billion per year in 2020 to between $21 and $43 billion per year by 2050.
Canada has a part to play. We are the seventh-largest emitter of greenhouse gases. Collectively, Canadians produce more GHGs per person than any other G20 economy. Building better transit systems can keep cars off the road. Investing in net-zero building retrofits and new green-construction techniques for commercial, industrial and institutional buildings, can help lower carbon emissions. Building renewable power systems that draw on wide, solar and tidal power can further reduce our dependency on oil.
All of these projects have the added benefit of creating millions of construction jobs, and an even-greater number of induced, indirect and supply-chain jobs.
The group’s second platform is to build fairness for unionized workers. About half of Canadians say they are worried about not having enough income to cover their expenses. Since the 1980s, the bottom half of Canadians have seen their real earnings shrink. The website calls for leaders to take action to build an economy that is fair for all Canadians, not just those who earn the highest incomes.
Finally, the coalition calls for new partnerships between labour, industry and government to build and strengthen apprenticeship and training programs across the country. It’s no secret that the construction industry will need hundreds of thousands of new workers over the next decade as the baby boomer generation approaches retirement age. The coalition argues that young Canadians should have every opportunity to learn about and pursue careers in the skilled trades.
The coalition website calls for interested parties to share its message through social media, and to encourage fellow Canadians to get out and vote in the October 21 federal election.
ACEC launches election website, sets main priorities
As part of its federal election advocacy strategy, the Association of Consulting Engineering Companies-Canada (ACEC) has launched a new website to educate candidates, political parties and the public on what it sees as two key issues: accelerating and sustaining infrastructure investments and creating a national infrastructure corridor.
Province appoints skilled trade advisors
As part of its overhaul of the provincial apprenticeship system, the Government of Ontario has appointed two training and skills advisors.
Adam Melnick and Andrew Pariser have been appointed for a period of two years. They will lead consultations with industry and stakeholders and provide recommendations to Ross Romano, the Minister of Training, Colleges and Universities, to modernize the skilled trades and apprenticeship system. Romano made the announcement on September 23.
Conference Board projects slow growth for Ontario
latest outlook report from the Conference Board of Canada shows slow growth—of just 1.6 percent in 2019 and 1.7 percent in 2020—for Ontario, as public-sector growth slows and investment fluctuates.