A rock and a hard place: Lab West organizations losing crucial summer hires to high-paying mine jobs - Action News
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A rock and a hard place: Lab West organizations losing crucial summer hires to high-paying mine jobs

Companies across Newfoundland and Labrador are beginning their annual hiring of students to fill summer positions sin Labrador West, including the communities themselves, are struggling to compete with the mines.

Iron Ore Company of Canada pays students just over $36 an hour

Organizations in Labrador West are struggling to compete with the region's mines to hire students for summer jobs. (Darryl Dinn/CBC)

Companies across Newfoundland and Labrador have begun their annual hiring of students to fill summer positions but in Labrador West, small community and municipal organizationsare struggling to compete with the money offered by mining companies to a small labour pool.

In a recent Facebook post, the Town of Labrador City said ithad to cancel its full-day summer program, which relies heavily on post-secondary student hires, due to a lack of staff.

Maggie Guilbeault, president of the Labrador West Minor Soccer Association, told CBC News her organizationhashad to get creative in its hiringand is reaching out to high school students.

"Our students are going to the mine. So we have lowered the age slightly to accommodate that issue,"Guilbeaultsaid.

It's likely an easy decision for students to take up summer jobs with mining companies in Labrador. The Iron Ore Company of Canada, for example, paysstudents just over $36 an hour to work in various roles at its minein Labrador City until Aug. 26.

For organizations and community programs that can't afford to pay a comparative wage, they're losing out on staff members they rely on to get them through the summer.

NDP MHA Jordan Brown says a housing shortage in his district of Labrador West is keeping young people from moving to the area. (CBC)

Jordan Brown, Labrador West's NDPMHA, said Thursdaythere is a general labour shortage in his district in general, and a housing shortage is making the student shortage even worse.

"It is a daunting task to compete with a mining giant like Rio Tinto who, because of their labour contracts, do pay their students very well because they're very required to. But also you have to look at the different industries," he said.

"It's partly on government to provide a decent wage with their subsidies, but at the same time we are fighting [for] a very small pot of students."

A lack of youth

Labrador West Chamber of Commerce president Toby Leon saidthere just aren't enough youths to fillthe demand for summer hires in the area.

"It's hard to fill those entry-level jobs even when people pay significantly more than elsewhere," he said.

"The youth aren't here. As a community, maybe we need to be a little more imaginativein terms of the use of some of our retired residents."

Some music and theatre programs will push on this summer even with a lack of staff, said Leon,but it will be a long climb back for other programs.

"We want people to come and live here and work here. We have to make sure their families get the same experience as they would get elsewhere," he said.

"They want to have fun. Kids want to have fun."

Read more from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador

With files from Darryl Dinn