Conservative Finlay Low Wage Immigrant Workers.
#1
Posted 29 April 2012 - 04:33 AM
On Wednesday, Finley journeyed to Alberta to announce that Ottawa will make it easier not harder for employers to hire temporary foreign skilled workers.
More importantly, she said Ottawa will allow employers to pay such foreign workers 15 per cent less than the prevailing wage.
Up to now, employers had to pay temporary foreign skilled workers the going rate. If comparable Canadian workers in an area received on average, say, $20 an hour, foreign workers would have to be paid the same.
No more.
The temporary foreign workers program began as a stop-gap measure in 2000, specifically to deal with a shortage of software specialists. But under pressure from employers particularly in the Alberta oil patch it has vastly expanded.
#2
Posted 29 April 2012 - 04:36 AM
"History I believe furnishes no example of a priest-ridden people maintaining a free and civil government. This marks the lowest grade of ignorance, of which their political as well as their religious leaders will always avail themselves for their own purpose."
Thomas Jefferson
#3
Posted 29 April 2012 - 06:17 AM
This is the start of the end for the middle class in Canada. We had a good run.http://www.thestar.com/news/canada/politics/article/1169568--walkom-ottawa-s-low-wage-immigration-policy-threatens-turmoil
On Wednesday, Finley journeyed to Alberta to announce that Ottawa will make it easier not harder for employers to hire temporary foreign skilled workers.
More importantly, she said Ottawa will allow employers to pay such foreign workers 15 per cent less than the prevailing wage.
Up to now, employers had to pay temporary foreign skilled workers the going rate. If comparable Canadian workers in an area received on average, say, $20 an hour, foreign workers would have to be paid the same.
No more.
The temporary foreign workers program began as a stop-gap measure in 2000, specifically to deal with a shortage of software specialists. But under pressure from employers particularly in the Alberta oil patch it has vastly expanded.
#4
Posted 29 April 2012 - 07:06 AM
Is it also the end of the left-wing?This is the start of the end for the middle class in Canada. We had a good run.
All of this is a solution of sorts, I suppose, albeit a 19th century one. But it is a solution that threatens to bring with it the kind of agitation now seen in countries like France, Holland and Greece — where the racist right is on the rise and where far too many workers view immigrants as mortal enemies out to steal their jobs.
Wouldn't that be the final twisted irony?
Edited by eyeball, 29 April 2012 - 07:06 AM.
#5
Posted 29 April 2012 - 07:38 AM
#6
Posted 29 April 2012 - 07:41 AM
#7
Posted 29 April 2012 - 07:47 AM
I agree with you. Let Canadians prosper from our own wealth.Don't look at me. I think the whole idea of temporary workers is ludicrous when we still have high unemployment. We should be training Canadians to do skilled jobs. As for unskilled jobs, well, if they pay more then people will take them. I know I used to.
#8
Posted 29 April 2012 - 08:31 AM
Bottom line, no one is forcing anyone to work. If employers need workers and no one will apply at the wage they are paying, then they will have to pay more. Supply and demand.
No company should be obligated to pay more than minimum wage.
#9
Posted 29 April 2012 - 08:45 AM
I don't have a problem with this. We have minimum wage laws, and so long as these wages are above the minimum, then why should anyone object? If you don't want the wage, don't take the job - it's that simple. No one is demanding that people work in these jobs and get FREE health care while they are here. That little tidbit alone should make up for it.
Bottom line, no one is forcing anyone to work. If employers need workers and no one will apply at the wage they are paying, then they will have to pay more. Supply and demand.
No company should be obligated to pay more than minimum wage.
What do you do for a living, Savant? Did you put a good deal of time, effort and money into obtaining a skill in order to earn a living? How would you feel if your employer told you he was cutting your salary to minimum wage, and if you didn't like it, you could leave? Oh, he couldn't do that? Sure, he could. He just has to hire a foreign worker who thinks our minimum wage is a kingly sum.
But you could work elsewhere then? Maybe. What happens if this spread, if all the employers realize how cheap it is to hire temporary workers, and all lower their wages?
#10
Posted 29 April 2012 - 08:50 AM
Not only that but say you did a trade. Meaning you put your time and money into going to school and getting 1000 apprenticeship hours at a much cheaper wage to get to a higher standard and skill. All of a sudden the government is letting in workers from countries who give out the same credentials but have a much easier process. You are not only at a disadvantage on wages you also have to do more and put more then the other guy so you are at a competitive disadvantage. This has the potential to hurt Canadian workers and our programs.What do you do for a living, Savant? Did you put a good deal of time, effort and money into obtaining a skill in order to earn a living? How would you feel if your employer told you he was cutting your salary to minimum wage, and if you didn't like it, you could leave? Oh, he couldn't do that? Sure, he could. He just has to hire a foreign worker who thinks our minimum wage is a kingly sum.
But you could work elsewhere then? Maybe. What happens if this spread, if all the employers realize how cheap it is to hire temporary workers, and all lower their wages?
No Reform Conservative I have ever met would support this. This has to come from the PC wing. Wow you Reformer have been taken for a ride I hope you are liking it. The PCs are back and the only bones the Reform wing gets is one guy taking about abortion and less environmental regulation everything else this government is doing is straight from the PC playbook.
Edited by punked, 29 April 2012 - 08:52 AM.
#11
Posted 29 April 2012 - 08:56 AM
Seems to me that based on how Canadians act and vote this is exactly what they asked for/ deserve.
This boat sailed along time ago. Consumers decided cheap goods and services trumped wages. At least you all have 60 inch flat screens to watch the bad news on!
Edited by dre, 29 April 2012 - 08:58 AM.
#12
Posted 29 April 2012 - 09:06 AM
The temporary foreign workers program began as a stop-gap measure in 2000, specifically to deal with a shortage of software specialists. But under pressure from employers particularly in the Alberta oil patch it has vastly expanded.
I tried to start a debate on here in the past with westerners who didn't seem to think that immigrants could work in the oilpatch. Looks like they were wrong. Get ready for your wages to drop 15%, and please don't let me hear any complaining out there, thanks.
They're lucky they only got hit 15%. Lots of workers have lost their jobs entirely through globalization.
#13
Posted 29 April 2012 - 09:09 AM
They are not lucky. The Oil is Canada's it isn't like manufacturing it can't move some where else. Canadians should demand to prosper from it. Instead we wont, we will bring in people who will do the work for less driving the prices of our labour down. Here is the good thing though. Those oil workers who would not even think of unionizing before now might just think having a say in all this might be a good thing. That 15% pay cut might just be enough to unionize those rigs and all of a sudden those workers get their place at the table. Here is to hope.I tried to start a debate on here in the past with westerners who didn't seem to think that immigrants could work in the oilpatch. Looks like they were wrong. Get ready for your wages to drop 15%, and please don't let me hear any complaining out there, thanks.
They're lucky they only got hit 15%. Lots of workers have lost their jobs entirely through globalization.
#14
Posted 29 April 2012 - 09:19 AM
I Know this won't let Tim Horton's pay less than min. wage but what about in Fort Mac where those workers get 15 or 20 bucks an hour?
Would they be able to get 15% less than that?
Harper must have more motives for this. Undercut unions, maybe fill jobs with temp. foreign workers that aren't being filled now by Canadians......what else?
What else do we know about this? There seems to be little info. Out there.
#15
Posted 29 April 2012 - 09:21 AM
They are not lucky. The Oil is Canada's it isn't like manufacturing it can't move some where else.
Manufacturing (refining) it is already mostly off shore, isn't it ?
Canadians should demand to prosper from it. Instead we wont, we will bring in people who will do the work for less driving the prices of our labour down. Here is the good thing though. Those oil workers who would not even think of unionizing before now might just think having a say in all this might be a good thing.
The cat is out of the bag with regards to global markets, punked. It's time to retreat and provide a new global offensive. Not sure how old you are, but have you ever heard of OBU ? One Big Union ? The unions were originally against national boundries as a way to divide and conquer. As has been pointed out, these boundries seem to be protecting certain things but not others.
That 15% pay cut might just be enough to unionize those rigs and all of a sudden those workers get their place at the table. Here is to hope.
Around the time of the great railroad, it was written that the Liberals would dominate Alberta... I guess we're headed back there 100-some odd years later.










