Ottawa overreacting with foreign-worker moratorium, Alberta says - Action News
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Ottawa overreacting with foreign-worker moratorium, Alberta says

Responsible employers who hire temporary foreign workers are being unfairly punished, says Alberta Labour Minister Thomas Lukaszuk.

Labour minister Thomas Lukaszuk says responsible employers being punished

The federal government imposed a moratorium on the use of temporary foreign workers in the fast-food industry. (CBC)

Responsible employers who hire temporary foreign workers are being unfairlypunished, says Alberta Labour Minister Thomas Lukaszuk.

"Finding workers to work in restaurants, particularly the night shift, is virtually impossible and the majority of employers have been using the program the way it was designed," he said.

Lukaszuk warnedthe province's restaurant industry will seean immediate impact andaccused the federal government of overreacting.

"It definitely appears to me as somewhat of a kneejerk reaction, a decision made in the evening without even advising provinces of such communicated, frankly, through the media.

"(It's)not the way I would conduct business, without a doubt."

Gil McGowan, with the Alberta Federation of Labour, welcomedthe moratorium even if, as he says, it wasmotivated bypolitical damage control and not genuine concern for foreign workers.

"The focus of Canadians who are angry about this program should be firmly on the federal government which put these rules in place, rather than on employers like McDonald's and Tim Hortons who have simply exploited those rules."

McGowan saidthe program is being abused in many other industries and believes wages for all Canadians are suffering as a result.

Federal Employment Minister Jason Kenney announced Thursday the immediate moratorium on the fast-food industry'saccess to the Temporary Foreign WorkerProgram.

The suspensioncame shortly after the CBC told Kenney the CEO of McDonald's Canada had branded recent criticism of its use of temporary foreign workers "bullshit" in a conference call to franchisees.

With files from CBC's John Archer