so hello and welcome everyone, my name is Michelle Branigan and i’m the CEO of electricity human resources canada
Thank you all for joining us today i know that many of you are thinking about vacations right now so i
do really appreciate you being here i know that you’ll all find some interesting takeaways that may shape how
you and your company plans to attract and recruit new talent going forward as we know the
canadian electricity sector is undergoing a demographic shift as older workers begin to
transition out of the workforce we’re seeing gaps emerging across a wide range of occupations and they span
engineering the trades business communications at technology and and others now young canadians
possess the skills and the knowledge to fill these roles but they’re not coming to work in this
sector our last lmi or labor market intelligence uh data reported that only five percent
of this sector are comprised of youth now as canada’s go to
uh organization for electricity human resources needs we conducted research to find out why so our latest report uh
generation impact future workforce perspectives surveyed over 1500 young workers across
the country we found that the biggest barrier to youth interest in pursuing a career in the electricity
sector was a lack of knowledge about the nature of the sector and the career the depth of careers that are
actually available now this insight presents us uh with a key opportunity to bring on
a new generation of workers and to really foster innovation but to maintain a strong workforce the
sector is going to have to position itself competitively to attract young employees and in order
to do that of course we need to understand their values and their motivations so if you’re on
this call you likely know that there are many varied very rewarding career paths in
electricity we are an essential service but this message so far has not been heard by the young talent
entering the canadian workforce on another note today is world youth skills day it’s a united
nations recognized holiday that focuses on the importance of youth employment and skills development
this year’s focus is on ensuring uh continuity during the covert 19
pandemic recognizing that youth make a substantial contribution to the essential skills
needed even during the most turbulent times and so as we were as we discussed this report today i ask
that you keep in mind the ways that you contribute to our economy and innovation and remember that we
cannot leave them behind uh during hardship now i also want to thank uh acknowledge
the support of our partners so the alberta electricity system operator or aso
elektra skills canada and the society of united professionals all of which have supported this report
because they believe in our next generation of workers now the government of canada is a
dedicated supporter of our work and our sector um to speak on behalf of natural
resources canada i would like to now invite paul lafave member of parliament
for sudbury and the parliamentary secretary to the minister of natural resources uh mr lafave welcome and thank you so
much for joining us today thank you michelle uh
good afternoon everyone very pleased to be here first i would like to uh begin by acknowledging that i am
calling or actually joining you in your offices or home from the traditional lands of the
anishinaabe people here in the sudbury area so it’s great to join you if only
by virtually but to help launch this important new report it is fitting that it is being launched today as
michelle mentioned it’s world youth skills day i don’t think we planned it that way to do this
the the launch of the report today but it’s uh it’s really very fitting so as you all know youth are the key to
our economic prosperity and they are the leaders not only tomorrow but of today so
engaging and supporting youth so we can together address our current and future challenges
is a priority for our government it’s why in the past year we launched canada’s first ever youth policy developed jointly with
young canadians it’s why this report is so important and the first of its kind a report that looks at what
young people think about a career in canada’s electricity sector not by guesswork
not by making assumptions but actually asking them and we’re also exploring their levels of
interest in the sector and in knowledge of the types of exciting and rewarding jobs that are await them
and then providing a road map for engaging them so why is this report so important for two main reasons
first because young people and women are underrepresented in this industry and that’s a problem as
the current workforce ages and eventually retires we need to recruit younger workers to take their
places a diverse workforce to lead the charge in this critical industry second this report matters
because electricity matters to meeting our climate change goals to creating good jobs and to shaping the
global transitions to cleaner forms of energy for canada that transition
offers an opportunity to dream big by creating an economy powered by clean and affordable electricity
and we are well positioned to do this canada has one of the best non-emitting electricity mixes in the
world with each region bringing its own strength hydroelectricity quebec manitoba bc
nuclear energy ontario and new brunswick and wind and solar from coast to coast electrification isn’t just an
opportunity it’s an imperative because let’s be clear canada will not
meet its climate change goals unless we drive clean electricity to every corner of our economy including
intersectors that are energy intensive such as transportation heating mining
and oil and gas extraction by imagining an economy powered by clean sources of electricity we can transform
existing industries and create entirely new ones strengthening canada’s competitiveness
and protecting the environment the report you’re launching today sorry
takes us closer to that future by building a bridge between an industry looking for young talent
and young canadians looking for jobs that are fulfilling innovative and well paid through the
student work placement program i’m proud to say that our government has provided 13.7 million dollars to support your organization and
important work that you do we also understand the importance of giving young people a leg up which is why over the past three years
we’ve invested 25 million dollars in youth employment through our green jobs program and created over 1700 stem
jobs for youth within the natural resources sector today i’m also delighted to announce
funding for two other initiatives that will also advance our environmental and reconciliation goals
first we are providing more than two hundred thousand dollars to opi kappa win services in fort
william ontario so in partnership with independent electricity system operator this funding will be used to engage
indigenous youth from rural and remote northern ontario first nations to increase awareness of the energy
sector to plug them into avenues to participate in renewable and energy efficiency projects and to
give them the tools to become leaders in their communities second we are investing more than 260 thousand dollars
in the ma the matawa first nations communities to develop energy literacy among young
and elders alike and to encourage youth from these from these remote communities
to pursue careers in clean energy and the electricity sector in both cases these investments will
help build capacity and community leadership to reduce dependency on diesel and pave the way to clean our sources of energy
in a rural and remote indigenous communities so it’s an important day for these communities and an important day for the electricity
sector as a whole so congratulations again to ehrc and all those involved with this outstanding report i know it will make
an enormous contribution to our energy future and i’m pleased you will be hearing directly from youth panelists shortly today
on world youth skills day it’s important as ever that we look at how we can further support youth in reaching their
goals and learning skills they need to pursue the careers that will transform our future
mercy well thank you so much for taking the time out of your your busy schedule
to join us today i know firsthand how dedicated uh yourself and this government
and natural resources canada are to our electricity sector uh demonstrated by uh by those two very
exciting um initiatives that you have mentioned and your support is tremendously appreciated thank you so much
now um i am delighted to invite david coletto ceo of abacus data uh to
speak to the findings of the report uh so this is what you’re here for to get into the nuts and bolts uh david
and his team at abacus conducted the research and david is as a wealth of knowledge and insight on this topic uh and now following the the
presentation on the research and the recommendations there’s going to be time for audience questions so please have
your questions ready uh before we hear from a wonderful panel of young employees in the sector
uh so millennials and gen z about their experiences so i’m quite excited to for that part of
that of today’s event but with that i’m going to hand over the mic to david coletto of abacus for an overview over to you
david thank you so much michelle and mr lefebvre uh pleasure to to see you as
well um welcome everybody it’s very exciting day um we’ve been working on this project
uh for much of of the past uh number of months and it’s exciting that it’s it’s out in
the public realm i’m gonna share my screen so i can jump right into the the data um as michelle said this this
project really came out of a desire to better understand what young canadians are thinking about
not only their own career goals what are they looking for in a type of work but what are their perceptions and
understandings of the electricity sector and how can we better align the two so that um organizations across the
country can better recruit and retain young people into the sector so we can increase not only
uh youth participation but as well diversity in terms of gender and and and um other other categories so
um i’ll jump right into to the study and as michelle said i’m happy to take any questions at the end as
as they come up to you uh very briefly we we did this survey um as it happened right before
uh the pandemic really took so that’s a an asterisk to put on some of these results is that this
was done prior uh to the pandemic but in fact when you look at the results you’re to see that
many of the themes we saw what what young canadians are looking for in work i suspect will only be stronger today
as we head into a much more challenging economic situation and the idea that there are
going to be many jobs in this sector going forward will actually make
um work in in electricity more appealing going forward but we did a survey of
1500 canadians aged 18 to 36 it was represented the population by age
gender region official language and the type of um education they had whether
they had any post-secondary education or not and what type of post-secondary education so this is a large national survey that
gives us the ability to to dig a little deeper and look for differences across group
or region or even inclination to to join the sector as i mentioned we had a number of
objectives um just to be clear the you know the four that i think are most important was
for us to better profile and understand who are the key targets for the sector who are those
already saying that they would be open or interested in a career in the electricity sector
and how do they differ from those who might not and understanding those gaps so that if we wanted to attract those who may
not be inclined at this stage to think that a career in electricity is is right for them how do you do that
uh two is to to better understand what is appealing to millennials and to older
gen members of gen zed um in terms of a career there’s a lot of myths out there about
what millennials want or what young people want and what we wanted to do was bring some data
uh to either back up and confirm those myths or and as you’ll see in a moment bust some of them and demonstrate that at the
core millennials or young canadians are i think very similar to older ones in terms of what they seek
in work then we shifted gears and really wanted to understand how is the sector perceived both
overall in terms of its role in canada in terms of an energy producer the different sectors of energy
different types of energy but also perceptions around what are jobs in the sector like
um in terms of pay in terms of availability in terms of you know diversity and then we tested a
number of messages so that as you all are out there trying to recruit people um
you have almost a toolkit on the types of things you should be talking about and the ways to connect
um the interests of young people their desire to have a purpose um they’re because they’ve got choices
and one of the things we’re learning in the all the work that i’ve been doing in this uh in this field looking at at work
and and younger generations is that you have to sometimes throw some assumptions
away that we may not understand the types of jobs that exist the the titles that we might use to describe
them and so understanding that language and and the broader story is important
so let’s get right into it and and i think you know as a market researcher i’m always interested in slicing
and dicing up the the audience that we’re speaking to and what’s clear is there is a market there is an
audience for electricity when we ask people you know which of the following best describes
your thoughts about a career in the electricity sector you can see that um those that say they definitely would
consider it are a small minority 13 but if you think that there’s about you know about
a million um canadians um or sorry 10 million canadians in
the the group that we surveyed that’s not an insignificant number of people to start with so that is your core
audience if you extend that and you say oh those who say i’m open to it um you get to almost half of the
population so you’ve got a good size group and if we break it out throughout this presentation i’m going to speak
about those that i describe as most receptive to the sector those already i think listening and open
to exploring a career maybe they’re already in it maybe they’ve taken uh studies that that have them on the
right path towards certain types of jobs in the sector then there’s another group what i’m going to call the less receptive
they’re open to it they haven’t shut the door completely but they’ll probably need more convincing and more understanding
there’s a third group what i’m calling the inaccessibles they’re going to be the hardest to convince and convert and as i’ll show
you their perceptions are guided by two things one is their views are
quite different from the other two groups and how they feel about the industry but a second fact is they don’t know
very much and so that lack of knowledge the lack of understanding is a barrier for them to being open to
the sector going forward and so those two dynamics if you want to expand the tent
are things to think about now from a demographic perspective i don’t think it’s surprising given even
the labor market statistics that michelle mentioned earlier that men are more likely to be in either
the most receptive or less receptive groups than than women are so attracting women remains
in terms of just the base opportunity perhaps more difficult but don’t also
forget that about a third of of um a quarter story of those that
are most receptive are women are fema young women and so there’s an opportunity there to
to retract them the other good news in in some of this and i’ll and i’ll speak to both indigenous
uh respondents in our survey as well as those from racialized or visible minority communities they don’t they appear not less likely
to want to join the industry in fact some in some cases more interested and open to doing it so that
opportunity to increase diversity attract people from different types of communities
this survey points to that as being absolutely positive and possible
we also looked at sort of where from an educational perspective prospects um or different audiences are
coming from um what this basically shows is not surprising those in the most receptive or less receptive
groups already have or are taking training and education that
more align with some of the work engineering technology business
management computers what we see is that among those in social science and humanities
not surprising they represent the highest proportion of those in the inaccessible group but even in that
category someone like me who’s got a political science degree um there’s a sizable group who are open
and interested in a career in the sector so you know it it
my my recommendation is not to silo people based on their their education but to recognize that
across the entire sector there is a role for people um from all all walks of life but also
uh all all forms of of education and things that they studied
so the big question and if i had the exact answer on all of this
i might be doing something completely different but we’re all struggling with this right and i always get this i do a lot of
public speaking and workshops across the country with with different employers who are always wondering how do we get young people um
to to think about our company our organization our sector um it’s almost as if we’re somehow you
know and i put myself as young but i’m almost 40 so maybe i should stop saying me but you know you’re gonna have a
great panel in a moment and you can we can learn from them directly but there is no enigma
uh to what young people want and what our survey showed is they want pretty much what everybody wants out of
work um and this is a little bit of the myth busting right they do want good pay they want
job security um perhaps more than older generations when they were starting their careers
they are seeking work-life balance in the covid world that’s perhaps even more important today than
it was when we did this survey they are looking for interesting work and they want some flexibility in their
work so these are all things that if you asked my mom when she was you know in her 20s starting her career
she’d probably say the same thing in my mind the big fundamental difference between young generations today
and previous generations at the same age is their expectations are much higher about
what work should be about the kinds of jobs they’re looking for and they believe they have more control
over their own destiny and so being able to communicate and and align your own
priorities as an organization and the types of talent you seek with the actual market um i think is
particularly important and so from our survey when we asked uh young canadians how important
are these to your career choice i i focus your eye on the on the green bar
um and and that’s those that’s the percentage of people say these items are very important to me and if you go down
the list and you look at the order pay job security and lifestyle
get you close to half of young people overall saying these are very important to me and so
this points to again i think perhaps a surprising result in some ways because we always
hear it’s always about purpose it’s always about you know my values and um what it says about who i am which
are important but it still matters the table stakes are am i fairly paid
is there security in my work and do you give me the kind of lifestyle that i seek those three things are particularly
important if you go down the list then and you ask yourselves okay what else do i need to do
this is where storytelling matters and the work that you’re asking someone to do to
enter to to spend time investing not only their money in terms of potential tuition and
training but also you know their time and their commitment
is is this worth it why am i waking up every day to come into the office or to
the workplace is the work fulfilling is it interesting is it challenging these are all things
that you can see almost all young people say are at least somewhat important but more say uh are very important to
them now when we actually ask people let’s rank them rank these items from you know
most important to least important uh here’s what people say are in their top three so pay
by far uh ellipses everything else and that’s not surprising um people expect to be paid a certain
amount and they’re looking to be able to um you know cover their costs save for a down
payment on a home because that’s something that all young people seek and want to be able to do allows them to live the lifestyle they
want but there’s a second tier where job security lifestyle fulfilling
work and a flexible work schedule emerge and these five items from pay
all the way to flexible work are items that if you’re if they’re communicated clearly
in the description of the jobs that are available in the values that your workplace have are
going to think be more effective at attracting people at the starting point but it’s not enough and it’s not going to be the only thing that matters
then we get into the type of place and the type of work that young people want to do and so what
we did here is we ask people which of these two statements or words better describes how you like to work
and if you just take us like a snapshot of the screen the first thing is there’s no
one size fits all for everybody some people want to work in a term team some want to work alone more want
to be active than you know for example being sedentary for most of the day almost 50 50 split on
working with my hands or working at a desk um and and you can go down the list right and and the point here again is
that when we unpack this a little bit as i’ll show you in a minute those most receptive to the sector
they start to lean towards one area but you have an ability to speak to the
range of jobs that are available and how do you align what somebody wants and what they want to do with
the kind of work that you’re looking to fill now this chart shows those most receptive to electricity so
we filtered out everybody else and what it basically shows is there are some differences
among this particular group they are more inclined to want to work with the team they’re more
inclined to want to work with their hands they’re more open to traveling and for
them [Music] you know solving problems is is something that’s really important when you think about
the types of people that are naturally attracted to engineering the trades um that
that solving problems about you know not minding getting kind of dirty at work is a natural inclination but it doesn’t
mean that all jobs obviously are there and and are described that way but it’s important for this group
the second thing that we really wanted to understand in this study is how do young canadians feel about the electricity sector overall it’s gotten
lots of attention we live every day but sometimes and i’ve done this in
other work we’ve done in in natural resources we take for granted often
how the lights get turned on and the amount of work and investment in capital and human
capital it takes to keep the system running but the good news is unlike some of the other sectors i’ve
worked with you don’t have an image problem right so half of young canadians have a positive impression
of the electricity sector when we look break that down by the three key groups that we’re talking
about you can see that those most receptive to the sector are also much more likely
to have a positive view and as you go down sort of the receptiveness list you can see that that
positive number declines now it’s not because now you’re going to say well 38
among inaccessible that’s a pretty low positive number but it’s important to note that it’s not
because they all think that there’s a negative view but to some there’s some negativity attached
to it and so understanding why do they have negative views about the sector how can you improve the overall
image of the sector becomes important but the thing here is there’s a strong relationship between being open
to working in the sector and having a positive view on it and for me the reason that’s so important
and the image of your sector matters so much is because not only does my job and my career matter to me
personally but we increasingly live in a world where we’ve always cared what other people
think of us but we now live in a social media world where it matters even more i i call it almost like the era of
personal branding and so i always ask the question of sectors or of employers
what does it say about who i am that i work for you or i work in this sector and
it’s important to continually be telling the positive story about what the sector
is doing now the good news is as you shift can we continue to shift our energy and
electricity production to more renewable or green technologies
renewable energy has a more positive view among young canadians 61 percent have a positive impression and you can
see that it gets quite high among those more receptive to the sector
and i’ll say that very few canadians have a negative view of of uh renewable energy so continually
talking about it but the other important distinction about your sector versus others is how
do you compare and so what we did in this survey is we asked young canadians to also early on in the survey tell us how they
felt about a number of other sectors and so here you can see where renewable energy
and electricity fall in the ordering and as i said the good news is
these are relatively speaking more positive than some other sectors right if you look at mining oil and gas
much higher negatives among the entire cohort um manufacturing
construction less not so much negative as more neutral and then you’ve got electricity and
renewable energy quite high near the top and again i’ll keep in mind these are before covid if we ask today about health care
and other sectors they’d be a little bit higher because of the the profile that they’ve gotten we also
have done work in the trucking sector for example and prior to the pandemic the trucking sector had quite a
negative uh perception that’s improved given the focus that that has been on the importance of truck driving the
essential uh nature of that work in many of the same ways that your sector is also deemed so essential to uh
just life in general and and the economy more broadly when we look at all respondents and we
break out you know where uh how people feel about the sector i think the point of this slide is to
show while men and women do have a sizable difference there’s a gender gap in perceptions
that gender gap is not that women are have more negative views than men it’s that they have less of a well-defined understanding of the sector
but we don’t see a lot of differences by age within the cohort uh by urban or rural or even regional
that there’s a consistency in this and so not you know if you’re if you’re an organization in atlanta canada
you know you’re going to have as a same type of audience for those living in in your region than say those in bc or
ontario or quebec so not a big difference across these regional or so
or demographic groups we also obviously looked at different sources of energy and how
electricity is generated and not surprising renewable sources like solar renewable energy more generally and wind
elicit much more positive views than than other sources of electricity
natural gas generally has a positive view you can see coal at the bottom um not so positive
overall but i highlighted nuclear energy i work with the canadian nuclear association as well and this has been a constant
struggle is communicating nuclear and that’s obviously important in ontario and new brunswick where
so much of our electricity is generated from this source that managing that story is is a
separate uh story but even there you’ve got um
you know not as negative i think views of nuclear energy as perhaps you would have had in previous generations at the same age
so that’s a positive thing but something still uh to monitor giving how important that source of electricity is
and in my personal view more important it’s going to be going forward as we try to replace
um other forms of fossil fuel generation among the most receptive to the sector
you can see these green bars grow even larger and that’s under uh except expected
given their openness to working in the sector coal still has a negativity but not as much
but certainly renewables natural gas even nuclear energy finds almost 60 percent or more saying it has
a positive view so all sources of of of generation um are deemed pretty
positive now when we go a little deeper then so we’ve got broad perceptions of the
sector that are generally positive um and compare well to i would say
sectors you’re competing with people uh for people to to consider a career in
we wanted to go and understand perceptions around the type of work within the sector and so what i’m about
to show you are the good is the good news these are things that those both receptive and to some extent
those who even inaccessible to the sector believe are true and these are positive feelings so when
we ask people do you think for example electricity jobs and electricity provide good pay and benefits 82 percent of those
most receptive believe that’s true only 10 percent say it’s false and you can see even among those who
right now wouldn’t consider a job most say that’s true so that’s a good starting point because that
signals to those um interested or thinking about a work that you know i i believe i’m going to make a
good pay and and benefits which as i showed you earlier is the top consideration for more young
people than any other factor pension plans um again we often take for
granted that young people don’t want to you know save for retirement or think about their
retirement security um but a pension plan is something that would actually attract
and so given that many uh organizations in the sector are either public sector or have
um pre-existing workplace pension plans that’s an attractive uh feature for for
young people particularly now particularly when the world seems uncertain uh the future is unsure that
that is a a nice benefit that that comes with it and for the most part those most receptive
and even those inaccessible believe that’s true of the sector so that’s another strength to reinforce
also good news is you know this is not a sector that most many people think the work isn’t
fulfilling or interesting so if you go again back to that list of items that i showed you earlier what
matters the top two three are pretty strong places for your sector to be in there’s
no big gap there and so that’s a a solid foundation in which to build the affinity
similarly there’s pretty extensive belief that where people live there are
opportunities so i don’t need to travel outside of my home community i don’t need to go somewhere i don’t want to be
that’s a big challenge for young people and trying to get them to come to work they believe they can find
opportunities in your sector where they live and so another uh important
uh foundation going forward um the last item that’s important to
reinforce is most uh young people who are receptive to the sector
and by a two to one margin those inaccessible believe they can find good work-life balance
within the sector and so there’s no perception uh or or high level of view that
this is a career that’s going to limit my ability to balance my work in life that’s not going to give me the
opportunities to do some of the other things i want to do and that’s a solid position so again all
of these are strong positions of strength to go on the last thing that i think is most important
is in a world where we talk all the time about displacement
right and jobs being eliminated because of technology
understanding perceptions around your sector in the future is important and what we
find is that most uh almost all of those most receptive to the sector
believe that the number of jobs in the sector over the next 10 years will increase so that’s a signal that um
there’s going to be opportunities that my job won’t disappear that i invest the time and the money in a career that i won’t be displaced
down the road one of the other things i always uh caution sectors and org
and um and employers to talk about is not to
double down almost on the idea that there are a lot of jobs in my sector and the reason i say that is people
don’t instinctively want to work in a place where they will feel nobody else wants to work there
so while you want to signal there are opportunities and the the sector is going to continue to grow
because of electrification because of um turnover in terms of generational change
that if you appear desperate for people um they might then ask the question why is it that nobody wants to work in your
sector so balancing those two i think is really important when connecting and speaking about your
sector going forward we also looked at some things you you have to change and and some perceptual
barriers uh that might prevent some people from considering a career one of them
being people like me work in the sector now that’s not a problem for those open
and most receptive to working in electricity almost all of them say i see people like me in this sector but
look among those who say they’re inaccessible or they don’t they wouldn’t consider a career in electricity
more of them believe this is false they don’t see themselves and so you know why is it so important to
continue to increase diversity continue to attract women because it has a domino effect in that the more i see
people like me in these industries doing this kind of work the more i’m going to feel that it’s
right for me um and that identity piece is is particularly important
perhaps the the greatest barrier and i don’t think this comes as a surprise is perceptions
around safety and the gap between the most receptive and the inaccessible here
is something that’s really important um and and again i don’t think surprising but
confirms i think a lot of what a lot of us believe now most people most receptive to the
sector believe that it’s safe um about one out of four say maybe it’s not the safest work out there
but among those inaccessible you have a much higher level of both uncertainty about the safety of
the of the sector and a profession within it and a high level of those who say no
outright it’s not safe and so that matters not just to the young person you’re trying to
communicate with it matters to their uh influencers their parents their
guidance counselors those in their life that are going to be sounding boards and influencers in their decisions
continually talk about and i know it’s a top priority of your sector but continuing to do that is is really
important in talking about safety and the safety culture uh that that your organizations each
have but also as a sector overall um
another key question that the survey tried to explore is what sectors are you or we
competing with and understanding that competition because we don’t operate in a vacuum and you are
competing consistently with other sectors who i have worked with some of them who are just as keen
and just as motivated to get young people to reconsider and to consider a career in those sectors and the good
news among the most receptive and that’s why and i’m looking at that group because
they as you see here in this first bar almost all of them say they would be
open uh or might consider a career in electricity when we ask this question in
a comparative sense they’re also open to a number of other sectors
and much more likely than others to be looking at for example construction
mining manufacturing but even among those that you would think are
probably more in line with more types of work in your sector they’re also open to
health care financial services and tourism and the point of this is
and it’s part of the storytelling we tested is as your sector moves more and more towards
big data blockchain uh technology based you’re competing for people who
may not have historically thought of themselves as wanting to work in the sector but have far more options that every
sector now is moving in that direction and so if you’re trying to compete for
that some that that person who studied computer science or engineering um they probably have opportunities in
all of these sectors even in hospitality and tourism which you may not think of but as those sectors move towards big
data and other types of of innovation there’s going to be a lot of competition there
among those least recep less receptive not least receptive to working in the sector you can see
electricity still higher than some of these others but they’re also open to these other sectors as well and so
that’s just a again confirmation that
very few people these days pigeonhole themselves into one sector it’s much more um if you can think of
like the the equation of how somebody decides what to do
the type of work the functional role of work is one aspect and then what does that what does the
sector uh me working in a particular sector matter um those two i think work together in
producing a decision um that people are thinking about the last section i want to talk about is
the story um we i guess you can’t go anywhere these days and not hear somebody say
tell a better story right but it’s so important because stories are how we connect
emotionally um and logically to whatever it is we’re going to do and
and a career the thing we’re going to do and spend most of our time doing in in a large part of our life is an
important decision and so feeling a connection understanding what the sector’s about and why i
fit in it is really important so we wanted to test a number of messages and what we did is
we asked respondents whether and i’m simplifying it here but we provided people a little
bit of text and and we asked them does this message does this story pull you uh make you
more likely to want to work in the sector does it make you less likely or have no impact so i call this
a pull and push does it pull me in or does it push me away and we tested a whole number of
different frames for example we told respondents that the sector is moving heavily towards renewable
energy going green it’s critically important as uh mr lefeb mentioned earlier that
the sector moves in this direction of canada and the world in fact are going to meet uh the climate crisis head on
and you can see that is a big pull for those most receptive already um it has no real impact on the
inaccessible but one out of five who said i’m not interested actually then says well wait a second maybe that’s a reason
i should consider it right so my advice is don’t focus on this number
being too high or it not being as high as you want if you’re able to attract even a small portion of those
inaccessible that is broadening the tent and expanding it when we tell people that for example
electric vehicles and the growing and the need for more people to convert to those over time will create new demands on the
system on the grid will create new opportunities for research and development
that’s a very strong pull for those already receptive and a substantially higher
pull for those inaccessible right that’s an important story people often don’t realize
how much work and effort it’s going to take to improve our grid to innovate our system in order to meet
the demand that increased electrification is going to bring that’s a story
that can both tell people there’s value you have purpose but also that this is
going to be a long-term sector that’s going to continue to grow when we tell people there’s growing need
for for skills and and those that understand how to use blockchain and big data
and the growing technological data-driven side of the sector that too pulls quite a bit of those
receptive to the sector already and a sizable number of those who were inaccessible to it
again re-framing getting people to think about this sector away from likely the image they have
which is that and i live in ottawa so auto a high you know hydro ottawa truck that drives
by near power lines to something that is much bigger than that and they can imagine themselves being
part of it and it’s not to say those jobs aren’t important and you shouldn’t be you need to recruit for them but that
you can get more people interested in understanding the opportunities we tested things like the need for smart
grids um and the role that technology and advanced skills and different skill sets are
going to require you can see there not as strong a pull for those most receptive but still
over three out of four say that’s important when we tell people that canada’s energy
and electricity grids are the cleanest in the world that’s a huge pull particularly for those inaccessible
right it allows them to i think overcome potential barrier where they feel they’re working in a sector that
doesn’t align with their values or doesn’t align with um you know their desire to see um to work
in a sector that’s doing good that’s making a difference that helps reinforce um their their storyline when we
speak specifically about the need for skilled labor in ontario to help refurbish the ontario
nuclear uh plants um that too has some pull as you would expect not as
strong given some people’s hesitation around nuclear energy but even among those most receptive you
see a pretty high number there meaning that story isn’t going to send people you know away but probably
wouldn’t be the one i put front and center but once you have them in the conversation it’s going to confirm that
there’s going to be a lot of well-paid jobs going forward last point i’ll make
and i and both michelle and uh mr lefab mentioned the need to increase
diversity in the sector uh we were able to have you know
fairly large samples certainly of women young women but also of indigenous members of that community
as well as racialized groups and just two points about this because it shows the opportunity
first is when we ask people as i said earlier do you see people like
me working in the sector true or false and you can see among those who were most inclined to want to
work in the sector upwards of 80 percent said i see people like me there but among these three groups they’re
it’s it’s lower um it’s particularly low among women so the the gender gap that exists in the
sector is well understood outside of it and so continually demonstrating the role that women are
playing in the sector the the desire and the interest that the sector has in attracting women
is going to be important because unless this perception is is increased or improved
that’s going to continue to be a barrier but those in racialized communities those indigenous young
indigenous communities they are almost as likely to say they see
themselves and the indigenous numbers i think very promising and it aligns with this is some of the
good news when we ask again in this survey we ask people how what’s the likelihood that you would consider working in
electricity um indigenous canadians or indigenous people are more likely
than others to say they are open to working in the sector those in racialized from racialized
communities are just as likely so that’s a signal here that um race ethnicity
doesn’t necess isn’t isn’t necessarily a perceptual barrier um and that if there’s an interest
and a desire to continue to increase diversity um it will be there the bigger challenge
likely will be young women and um that’s that’s not unique to your sector
uh but there’s still i would say one out of three is a good number to build off of and
there’s opportunities there going forward so to wrap up i know there’s lots of
data and i appreciate you taking the time to sit through it i come back to what i started with and
that is i’ve been doing these kinds of studies for for a number of years now
and i’m continually trying to break perceptions and stereotypes about the generation that this is a
generation whether you’re talking about millennials or gen zed of people who don’t want to work hard that they’re entitled
um i don’t i don’t believe that’s true um i think that’s true of some people in
every generation but to to paint uh an entire generation with that brush
is is not helpful first of all and likely not going to win you uh supporters among those that
you’re trying to recruit but if you understand what matters and i think in a post-covered world
the fact that salary and security were high up on that list will be even more important and so here
you are as a sector that is not going anywhere in fact demand is going to go up um you have a compelling story that
aligns with the things people are looking for the most but that’s often not enough and so
what do you then say to people when when they ask but what does it say about who i am
because i can get a pretty good salary and good security and other in other professions or other sectors
and that’s where the storytelling comes in the third point i’ll say is
you know the safety question is something to to to be continually mindful of um and to to confront head-on and to to
talk about the success and the diligence that your sector has in creating safe workplaces for
for people and finally um what what this study clearly
demonstrated is you have a story you should all be proud to tell that it is compelling that it’s positive
and that it aligns with particularly young people their deep concern about climate change
their deep concern about a transition away from fossil fuels towards
renewables and you are at the cutting edge of not just doing research and developing new technologies
but actually putting it into place and without more people doing it it’s never
going to happen that’s a powerful call to action that i think you can you can repeat so
i i encourage you to think about these three groups and the report goes into much more
detail about each of them but as i will end with i think you have
a lot of opportunity i think your position your sector is well positioned um strong reputation
good outlook and now it’s just about converting that into more young people applying for jobs
and feeling good about that decision so michelle i will uh stop there and um
we can answer some questions
thank you david i i think and of course i’ve seen the report many times at this stage but it’s i always think it’s it’s
fascinating how um some of those as you say those misperceptions and those myths are out there in the industry and
you talk about values and i think a lot of people have thought about millennials in gen z generation that you know
value supersedes everything else including good pay and good salary and at the end of the day everybody is
trying to you know have a roof over their head and perhaps have a family and as you say
want the same things that generation after generation has traditionally wanted so it is so important to to bear that in
mind and of course you know we need to make sure that we continue to to look after those and ensure that if we
have interns and co-ops that we are paying them for the work that they are doing as well too and and remember that that whole
that the whole storytelling that you talk about that piece and how you represent your organization that starts even when you have those young
people looking to work in your your company right even if it’s at for a three-month co-op placement um because that’s an experience that
they have that’s an impression that they have of your company and the industry overall so we can’t start that conversation uh
too early absolutely and it’s it’s really important you know you’re a sector that doesn’t
get a lot of coverage in pop culture right you’re not on people’s radar on in a natural easy way
and it’s hard it’s it’s going to be very difficult to get into that mix so you have to instead um you know be
strategic and thinking about that story and and who you tell it to and making sure that universe around that person
that you are interested in and recruiting um you know we we did an interesting exercise in this survey where we asked
people if you were to go home i didn’t show you the results and tell your mom or dad that you’re gonna join the sector
how would they react and we used all these different emojis some of those reactions um in thinking about that how would a
parent react to their kids saying i want to work for you know hydro ottawa
um how would they react and i think you know it’s probably positive but you need to
reinforce that and give them evidence i do see one question here and and for those who are least
least receptive that category was there any indication that they were aware at
all of the variety of jobs in the electricity sector i would um it appears no um
and and i think that’s something that’s important right we didn’t talk a lot about in the presentation but it’s it’s it’s always you know as i said
there’s a there’s an image that that people will naturally have when i say electricity sector and they will instantly say well that’s
not for me so you have to constantly be reminding them and showing them about the range of jobs
and i think you know someone just commented on on on our on our chat here that the competition with you know high tech
and and social media uh kinds of work means that people will eventually
realize i can do certain functions certain types of tasks
in most sectors um but the job titles are not necessarily clear and that’s i
think how a lot of young people think about work is like what’s my title going to be and so thinking creatively about that i
think in the sector might might also help get people to to differentiate between the range of jobs that might exist
i have loads of questions i’d love but i know we’re short on time and we better keep on track because we have a great uh great panel
coming up um but i know we’ll we look forward to continuing this uh this discussion david
and particularly i think the impact of cobit as well too is going to be interesting to see what impact that that has had on
perceptions of the jobs um i know that in some uh countries um in the post-secondary education
programming um the applications for essential worker type programs like the medical field for
example has actually gone up it has actually increased and i wonder will we see something like that as well
too as we move forward so lots to move on so thank you thank you so much um i’d
like to to now welcome uh our guest today so we have with us matthew d and shannon
i’m looking forward to a good conversation here your views and your perspectives of both your careers and the industry of
course and also many anything that may have surprised you or jumped out at you in the report so
i’m going to let you introduce yourselves so dee why don’t we start off with you
all right uh hi everyone my name is dee i am a gen zed so i’m i’m 20 years old
and i am a student who is going through the electrical engineering technician
industrial program so basically i’m just learning all the different types of electricians
and and being able to practice with multiple different materials and i’m
just getting started in the trade and i’m also an ambassador with kick ass crews
thank you d matthew i’ll jump over to you okay hello everyone i’m matthew meyer
i’m a millennial i’m 29 years old and i’m a nuclear engineer working at the darlington nuclear power plant for ontario power
generation i’ve been in the electricity sector for seven years now and i’m also the canadian operations
officer at north american young generation nuclear a board member with the canadian nuclear association and a young professional
member with the energy council of canada you can tell matthew’s a high achiever right
[Laughter] shannon over to yourself
my name is sharon tamasco apparently i’m still a youth so thank you very much i’m
31 years of age and i fall into that millennial category i’m a first year electrical apprentice
with the international brotherhood electrical workers in hamilton local 105 and i’m an
ambassador for kick-ass careers fantastic shannon sticking with you do you want to sort of
just fill us in a little bit on how you actually got started in your career path here in the electricity um i was actually on
a job that i i disliked i was really looking for job satisfaction you spend more time at
work than you do at home um and my friend purchased a home we you know one day just started renovating
and pulling things apart and i didn’t realize you know until i was in my late 20s that this was something that i was passionate
and enjoyed um based on you know those kind of experiences that i had i started
looking for other options um and and i found a pre-apprenticeship program with the ywca here in hamilton
and that’s how i started my journey so i completed that process and now i’m working away fantastic
dee what’s your story how did you get started i i started quite late in high school
i was all lined up to go to university for the study of meteorology
up until grade 12 where i did a complete 180 and tried out a trade class i come from a
very academic high school so the only trade class we had was a custom woodworking
so i took that and i really loved it and i met jamie mcmillan who really kind of when you go back
to what you’re saying about seeing people like me in the trade that was my that was my position where i
saw jamie and that was really amazing um so i then went to
conestoga for the powerline technician program
i didn’t quite love it um so i switched to the program i’m currently
in and i’m loving every second of it matthew over to you yeah so i really
wanted to get involved with engineering i wanted something that was stable that had a pension
but i also wanted to make a difference as well so in high school i started to research pollution research how we could
combat climate change and nuclear really intrigued me so went to uoit
i did my nuclear engineering degree there and then really the internship program at opg was a great way to transition
from engineering and school to the real world and uh luckily through that i
i’ve been working in the nuclear sector for opg ever since so and it’s so it’s interesting uh
listening to you so the the idea of seeing somebody actually um in the sector and getting to meet those
people and talk to them and really really um influence your your thought process as you as you
thought about a career possible career in the industry right that’s uh i always think that’s so interesting
because we always gravitate to a sector or job sometimes based on the people that we know that are working
that we are working in it shannon once you started working in the sector was there was there anything that surprised
you um i have a background originally in
social work management customer service very business background and so
um i found a lot of the leadership styles previous employments was about growth development
um you know of your staff and it was a lot of it was a lot of you know development of people um so it is a very
different world working in the construction world the leadership is is most certainly different in how you motivate and
inspire people and i find that the process people procedures are just really
hesitant to change you know even if it is you can explain that this is the best of the business this is the best cost decision
all of those things i do find that um they’re very hesitant for change and so
that was something that was a bit of a surprise matthew yourself yeah it’s just
shocked at how many people worked in nuclear i i imagine kind of a nuclear station would only have a couple people
in it uh but for example here at darlington we almost have uh 3 000 people
and there’s trades there’s lawyers there’s communications officers there’s procedure writers there’s
marketers there’s all these different people and that really surprised me i i don’t
know i just had a limited kind of opinion going through nuclear engineering in school that you know you just need a couple
people to uh to design it and then it’d run itself and uh but i
just shocked how many people worked in the electricity sector and that’s very relevant of course to
the conversation that we’ve just heard today and and there is the research findings where
it’s it’s the lack of awareness about the depth and breadth of career career
opportunities or job types that are actually available in the sector right everyone thinks of the iconic
power line worker or lots of folks even if they don’t work in the electricity industry think of electricians they
don’t necessarily even understand the difference between a construction or a residential electrician and all those nuances right
so um again that’s that’s where part of the big communications piece is going to be so important
see any surprises for you early in well actually uh i would like to echo
uh matthew quite a bit though when i started i um i had a very
uh i was very short-sighted with seeing everything um i thought your classic electrician
was the big guy that came into your house and fits your light um so i was really really shocked
uh to see all the different types of electricians from working on big big um
solar panels to little tiny uh chips to put in your phone like it’s it was really shocking to me to see
that and all of the different types of materials that um electricians use
now we heard in the in the report and and uh david’s presentation about the the
things that millennials and uh and the gen zed uh generation value
the things that they were you know we talked about values pay salary all those other things work life balance those types of things opportunities did
that resonate with you what sort of things that in the report resonated you uh in regards to that component
matthew you want to start yeah and this is the thing i think there’s a misconception with millennials
and gen z is we still want a house we still want to be able to pay rent we still want to have a pension
we want to have the job security you know we’re not risk seekers a lot of us that want to start in a startup
basement internet type of startup company a lot of us want to be connected with
our co-workers and we want that fulfilling satisfaction that story that we can tell others
how we’re making a difference why our job matters and how we’re giving back so i i think
the the top four that were highlighted pay job security lifestyle and
fulfilling uh really resonates and uh really that’s been the big thing i’ve noted that i
really like is you know pay and job security are huge but does your company have a culture that allows you to to
give back is it something you’re proud of and uh i think that that’s that’s really
what the millennials and gen z are looking for i feel like they’re making making a contribution right to the to
the organization shanna the same question to yourself um i agree with everything matthew just
said about um you know resonated with the article especially with the top you know four ones and security
and pay um what i do find interesting that wasn’t highlighted and i think is really
important for millennials you know um it was talked about earlier about how millennials have really high
expectations these days and one of the things not discussed in the report was work environment um i can’t help but again i talk about
you know construction maybe a little bit few steps behind you know these big corporate companies like google and
you know where their focus is really on on their their team their their people um and so
culture is something that i think is something that really needs to be trickled down right down to you know the construction site where
it’s maybe not necessarily something that’s you know changed yet or is you know
needs to make a slow change to something yeah yeah i think it’s really important
we’re trying to to attract and recruit people to the to the industry um organizations need to look at their
their culture right they need to take a sort of that self-assessment and and and try and look at it from an outside perspective
what is that you know if i was to ask my our employees to talk about our culture and our organization and our values
wouldn’t would that be good would that be a good thing because that’s what what young people i think yeah pay attention to dee what about yourself
well i’ve always been striving for a career with good pay pension
job security um i’ve i’ve my parents have always stressed the
importance of that so i think that there is a high expectation
for millennials and gen zeds to find that because that is what has been preached to us um
which is really important get good benefits um and and all of that so that’s something
that i really resonated with um with the statistics um
so yeah i just think a lot of a lot of young people are really looking for that and expecting it
so i guess my next question and david had referenced it in just at the tail end there we didn’t
have time to get really in detail there’s more detail of course in the report but it you know you go home and you talk to
your to your parents um we have sort of a icons like emojis um you know would your
parents be crying or would they be excited and delighted and all that sort of thing um and i think that’s really important
um because we also need to consider the influences are in our life right whether it’s a high school teacher
it’s somebody like jamie that you’ve met it’s uh it’s a parent and so that’s important so so what do
your friends and family think about your career deal go back over to you um well
my friends and family are actually quite proud of me um i’m the first person in my family to
enter the trades so it’s all a big learning experience and everything is new to us but the support that my family
gives me is incredible and it was actually my dad’s idea to look into the trades and
specifically electricity
um well my biggest fan is my four-year-old nephew tyson he wants to grow up to be a construction
worker just like auntie shannon um but overall my friends and family are quite supportive of me
i don’t really know if they quite know what i do on a day-to-day basis i know i can hear my mom’s voice she’s
got a little bit of concern for my safety but i like to remind her every day at work i’m in control of my safety
there’s tons of jobs out there um like i said social workers teachers these guys experience unsafe situations
too um not always within their control i’m in control of my safety at work and so um my family friends very
supportive about my new journey matthew so in the nuclear industry we
saw that the impression was largely not as supportive as with renewables and this is what i’ve seen is when the
friends and the family understand what nuclear does how we use isotopes for cancer research how we use
it for sterilizing food how we’re one of the cleanest for fighting climate change and reducing
pollution and really selling that story they become much more supportive so i think
that’s another thing that david uh highlighted is it’s that storytelling and then
you know getting your job to how it helps impact the community so they started out
not too sure but they’ve become much much more supportive as we’ve as we’ve learned more i’ll stay with you
matthew just um and i know we have about five minutes left what would you want other people um including students
who are perhaps in high school right now um who are starting to think about their careers
uh what would you like them to think about working in the industry
so i would just say that there’s so many job offerings out there to really not be discouraged to really
look into it if you’re an animator if you’re a communications expert if you’re a twitter expert
like there’s so many different jobs and careers don’t be discouraged by the the lack of
diversity be the one to change it and really start to change this industry and start to look
at how we can combat those long-term goals of fighting pollution energy security especially we see it for
covet everyone started to panic that they were going to run out of toilet paper but no one really started to panic that
they needed a generator because without electricity the grocery stores would not have enough food
hospitals would not be able to treat people so i’d say start to look at how important
electricity is and start to consider a role in that in the future
same question um just to continue on i i was going to say endless opportunities in the electrical
field you know there’s travel there’s chances to travel um there’s you know different avenues
you can take renewable energy you can work in transportation you can work in single signals there’s so many different avenues
that you know it really is an open door for you and the other thing that i
really think is great for high schoolers is um you can get an education without accumulating a bunch of debt
this is like a nice way to start your life opposed to the other alternative maybe ways to go um there’s programs
that you can start in high school ontario youth apprenticeship program you can start your career dreams
in high school um and i’m very envious when i see those young 20 year olds on my job site and they’re
already you know they’ve got a down payment for a house because they you know found their passion kind of young and so
if there’s something i’d say go go try different things and and you know see if electricity is for you
because there are so many opportunities dee what would you want to tell other
young people again it’s starting out i’m gonna sound like a broken record um because we’re all basically saying
the same thing which is try it you just there are shop classes
there are co-ops there there are so many things in high school that uh kids or students young adults don’t
understand that they’re given a great opportunity to try things without spending thousands of dollars
so i would also say specifically for the electricity trade there are so so many different paths um
if you like working outside there’s something for you if you like working inside there’s something for you if you like sitting around we could probably find
something for you as well so um there’s there’s so many different type of
electricians and jobs and careers that you can find almost anything you’re looking for in
the electricity sector and i think a thing to remind people as well is is that all of those things are
fabulous and the different types of careers and you may have different jobs within the sector you can you can move
you can have different career paths over your career right it’s you don’t necessarily have to do the one thing for the 30
years you can actually move around and i think that’s that that’s exciting in and of itself to know
that you can have that different type of career path as you as you move through your career and and hopefully pay it forward and you
know and train and train and uh inspire other people well this is almost time to wrap up i
want to thank all three of you i have to say um i’m very inspired listening to your stories thank you so much for sharing i
think you’re fantastic advocates and and leaders in our industry so thank you so much for your for your time today um
we are going to to wrap up uh we just got a couple of minutes left i do want to thank um everybody i think
i speak for everybody and i know especially at ehrc when we say that we really value your your
contributions and and the perspective that you’ve all brought to the table thank you to david coletto from abacus
data of course we’re doing a great job um with the presentation and and taking those questions
and uh many thanks of course as well too to our parliamentary sector secretary to the minister of natural
resources canada for joining us today i’m excited to hear more about those uh those two
initiatives uh again i just want to thank the sponsors of the report uh the aso elektra skills canada and the
society of united professionals again all organizations who are so committed uh to
supporting uh the next generation of youth who are looking to work in this industry and to everybody who’s been with us
today i hope it’s given you something to think about it certainly has for us as we work um a
move forward uh to build that sort of resilient workforce of the future
you can visit electricityhr.ca to get a copy of the report it has just been downloaded right now and of course we
will share a copy of this recording should you wish to share that um amongst your peers
um and with other folks so thank you everybody and enjoy the rest of the summer and uh