First Canada Job Grant goes to…

A Winnipeg tech company is the first to access the federal government’s much-debated and controversial worker training program.

Winnipeg-based information technology service provider Oxygen Technical Services Limited is the first recipient of the Canada Job Grant, which helps Canadians obtain job training by providing up to $15,000 per person for related costs. When fully implemented, a total of $300 million will be invested in the effort on a national basis.
 
Oxygen, which has 20 employees, provides clients including Cisco Systems and Dell with procurement, project management and managed services. Funds from the Canada Job Grant will now allow the company to invest more than $56,000 to support skills training and certification for 15 current employees. Those funds include more than $18,000 from Oxygen’s own coffers.
 
The firm was selected as the grant’s first recipient for several reasons: the training will lead to certification, which in turn supports job creation; the training is linked to company growth; and Oxygen is a small business in a vital economic sector. Oxygen was an early applicant for the Canada Job Grant and met basic selection criteria by providing eligible training costs, employer contributions, a third-party trainer and an available job at the end of training.
 
“Our government’s top priorities are creating jobs, economic growth and long-term prosperity,” Minister of Employment and Social Development Jason Kenney said in a statement when announcing the launch of the program. “The Canada Job Grant is part of our commitment to address the paradox of too many Canadians in an economy of too many jobs without Canadians. With employers’ skin in the game, the Canada Job Grant will lead to a guaranteed job.”
 
You Might Also Like:
Canada Job Grant launched to fill Alberta jobs
Deal reached on Canada job grant?
Canada Job Grant debate continues

Recent articles & video

Why are fewer PTO requests being approved?

How many hours are employees saving due to gen AI?

Mercado Libre to hire about 18,000 people: reports

'Terrifying' trend: Over 11 million malware attacks recorded globally in past 4 years

Most Read Articles

Remote work to blame for Nike's innovation slowdown, says CEO

McKinsey & Co. to lay off over 300 employees: reports

Novartis to cut over 600 jobs amid global restructuring