Not too many FUTURE jobs in the Province will come from incentivized outside ‘consultant’ engagements by our government. Even if they lift the bar on ‘with-it’ technologies, those ‘learned’ will be attracted elsewhere – as there are all too few employment places to practice in.
Ask yourself why investment by local employers has faded over the last 100 years? What is suggested by the expression which has been voiced more and more over the last 30 years – “employer-friendly labour legislation”?
You missed the point. Not being a part of a stable, balanced industry that just had the stability turned upside down by an ignorant meddling government, you can’t be blamed. You and the Dexter government, however, are naive, at best, to assume that subsidizing one service firm is not a kick in the teeth the the existing companies who now have to compete with a subsidized workforce. Go do your homework – this company has been here for a while, competing for local work too. Companies here doing work in Alberta are not subsidized by the Alberta Government.
Undoubtedly the best and most ambitious of the NSGEU employees will take advantage of this opportunity, and the rest won’t. Perhaps the success of the minority will demonstrate that there is life beyond the civil service.
Not too many FUTURE jobs in the Province will come from incentivized outside ‘consultant’ engagements by our government. Even if they lift the bar on ‘with-it’ technologies, those ‘learned’ will be attracted elsewhere – as there are all too few employment places to practice in.
Ask yourself why investment by local employers has faded over the last 100 years? What is suggested by the expression which has been voiced more and more over the last 30 years – “employer-friendly labour legislation”?
gordon a.... | November 12, 2012 |
Get rid of first contract arbitration for a start
Bill B
Bill | November 12, 2012 |
You missed the point. Not being a part of a stable, balanced industry that just had the stability turned upside down by an ignorant meddling government, you can’t be blamed. You and the Dexter government, however, are naive, at best, to assume that subsidizing one service firm is not a kick in the teeth the the existing companies who now have to compete with a subsidized workforce. Go do your homework – this company has been here for a while, competing for local work too. Companies here doing work in Alberta are not subsidized by the Alberta Government.
Jeffrey Pinhey | November 12, 2012 |
Undoubtedly the best and most ambitious of the NSGEU employees will take advantage of this opportunity, and the rest won’t. Perhaps the success of the minority will demonstrate that there is life beyond the civil service.
Jill Rafuse | November 12, 2012 |