Thompson bracing for job losses after northern Manitoba mine owner admits to bleeding $300K a day - Action News
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Manitoba

Thompson bracing for job losses after northern Manitoba mine owner admits to bleeding $300K a day

A mining city in northern Manitobais facing another setback as the owner of the community'snickel mine is preparing to shed more jobs.

Vale says efforts to find 'simpler and more nimble operating model' will mean smaller workforce

Vale says it will need to lay off workers to ensure its future in the mining city. (CBC)

A mining city in northern Manitobais facing another setback as the owner of the community'snickel mine is preparing to shed more jobs.

Vale says it cannot continue to operate its Thompson mine under the status quo, after losing $300,000per day in 2019.

"We need to find a simpler and more nimble operating model to ensure our future in Thompson," said Franco Cazzola, manager of Vale's Manitoba operations, in an email to media.

"This will mean a smaller workforce than we have today. We will consider every option available to us to ensure any job reductions are as limited as possible, and we will ensure they will not impact the safety of our ongoing operations."

Vale will embark on a comprehensive review of its mining operations in Thompson, before deciding on next steps for restructuring. It expects to finish the report this fall.

Trimming jobs for years

The president of United Steelworkers 6166, a union representing 552 mine workers, said it's a big hit to a city that hasrecentlylost hundreds of mining jobs.

"It's very disheartening and a lot of people are probably wonderingwhen it's going to stop," saidWarren Luky.

The company employedroughly 1,450 people full-time in Thompson in 2017, but haslost hundreds of staff afterit closed anickelminein 2017 and shuttered itssmelting and refiningfacilities a year later.

It was estimated in 2018 that Vale would have roughly 850 employees by 2019.

A Vale official did not respond to a questionWednesday regarding the current size of its workforce in Thompson, a city of 13,700 people which is about 650 kilometres north of Winnipeg.

The company's former head of Manitoba operations,Gary Eyres,said late last year there was a plan to try to convince Vale's owners in Brazil tospend$1 billion to step upexploration effortshere. Hewanted to extend the mine's life span byroughly 25 to 30 years.

But first, Vale wants to make its short-term operations sustainable.

"What they're indicating to us [is] because we're having problems making money on what we're doing, itjeopardizes our capability to pull in capital later on,"Luky said.

'Mining to extinction'

He said investments areneeded to ensure mining has a future in Thompson.

"Some say it's called 'mining to extinction.'I've been worried about the lack of capital money here for some time," he said.

"We don't have the investments needed to properly be able to address and to exploit the ore body we have here."

Lukysaidheunderstands Vale hasfaced challenges locally,but was still surprisedto learn Tuesday of the large-scale review.

He was told there could be layoffs this November, but he said other details are hard to come by. The company hasbeen "very ambiguous" regarding its plans, he said.

Meanwhile,union membership is left with questions.

"They don't know where they stand with the company and they're frustrated," Luky said.

With files from Ramraajh Sharvendiran