Temporary foreign worker impacts felt far beyond RBC - Action News
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Temporary foreign worker impacts felt far beyond RBC

The Royal Bank of Canada has issued a printed apology to workers affected by their outsourcing arrangements, but the bank's public relations problems haven't gone away.

Business expert says Canadian wages are being kept low by foreign worker availability

RBC's apology doesn't stop the anger

12 years ago
Duration 2:04
The bank's PR problems continue after issuing a printed apology

The Royal Bank of Canada has issued a printed apologyto workers affected by their outsourcing arrangements, but the bank's public relationsproblems haven't gone away.

After a week of backlash following a CBC News exclusive that revealed the bank is bringing in foreign workers to replace Canadian employees, RBC spent thousandsof dollars on a public apology that was published in national newspapers Friday.

In the letter, RBC president and CEO Gord Nixon promises to find other jobs within the bank for the 45workers being displaced by the temporary foreign workers.

Temporary workers forongoing jobs

Mark Thompson, professor emeritus at UBC'sSauder School of Business, says the story is much bigger than almost four dozen RBC workers, and it's far from over.

'If you can get foreign workers for the prevailing rate... thenyou never have to raise the wages for the Canadians.' Business professor Mark Thompson

"Ithink there's going to be more examples of temporary foreign workers doing things that most people in the public wonder about."

Thompson says there are over 300,000 temporary foreign workers in Canada in jobs that aren't temporary in restaurants, in health care, and in many other fields.

"Normally, if you have a shortage of people, the response iswages go up... If you can get foreign workers for the prevailing rate where the market doesn't clear, thenyou never have to raise the wages for the Canadians," he said.

Unions are pushingthe banks andpoliticians to change the policies on foreign workers.

Jim Sinclair, president of the B.C. Federation of Labour, says unions may decide to pull billions of dollars in pension investments out of bank accounts.

"If taking our money out of their banks would help get them the message that Canadians are angry, that Canadians are upset not only with the banks but with Stephen Harper and his government who has turned this program into a wholesale wage cutting strategy," Sinclair said.

Prime Minster Stephen Harperhas pledged to reform the policy and prevent abuses.

Stocks at Canada's biggest bank have yet to take a hit, suggestinginvestors appear to be unfazedby the controversy.

With files from the CBC's Theresa Lalonde