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December 27, 2019

Program offers opportunity to get into Toronto’s booming construction industry

 

Twelve stories above Front and Spadina, Stephanie Crarey stands on a ladder, working on an elevator shaft at The Well, one of the country’s largest construction sites.

The 32-year-old doesn’t have time to take in the unobstructed views of Toronto’s skyline or Lake Ontario.

She’s too busy working.

“I cut, I measure, I hammer, whatever they need done, that’s what I do,” she says with a smile.

She’s a carpenter’s apprentice. Something she started last year as a second career, after working a desk job with the provincial government.

“I’m loving what I’m doing, even though there are days when it’s hard emotionally, physically, but at the end of the day I’m satisfied,” said Crarey.

It’s that kind of sentiment Mike Yorke hopes resonates with other young people, who may not have considered a career in construction.

“Our industry desperately needs skilled workers,” says Yorke, the president of Carpenters District Council of Toronto.

“But we don’t have enough skilled workers, so we’re growing and developing our own through our apprenticeship program.”

Yorke says across Ontario, up to 500 carpenters are expected to retire every year for the next 10 years.

Between Toronto’s booming condo construction, mixed use projects like The Well, and major transit projects such as the Eglinton LRT, he says replenishing workers in the field is critical.

That’s where a pre-apprenticeship program, like concrete formwork, comes in.

The seven-week course is designed for people new to the construction industry, with little to no experience and is run out of the College of Carpenters and Allied Trades.

Keep reading on CBC News