PANDEMIC: "The Great Reopening"...Too Soon?
And here I sit, checking job boards as I listen to The Current and write this post...and I've been checking job boards whatever my circumstances.
And the pressure to temp continues to be noticed. So do its consequences.
Source: Saira Peesker for OpenFile Toronto
Are you certain of where you’ll be working a year from now? If so, you’re one of the lucky ones—and not just when it comes to your wallet.
Only about 60 per cent of Canadians have that kind of job security, says an academic who studies short-term workers. He says the trend is growing. McMaster University labour studies professor Wayne Lewchuk says up to twice as many people are working precarious jobs compared to the 1980s, as an ever-increasing number of employers hire short-term contractors over permanent employees.
“The old role of temp agencies has been abandoned,” Lewchuk says. “Now temporary work is a permanent part of companies’ staffing plans... Today, half of our teaching (at McMaster) is permanently done by contract people. We have slots that are always filled by someone who is a temporary worker—these aren’t replacements.”
More in the link.
Jeff Rubin - The End of Growth - Ottawa - 1 June 2012, a set on Flickr.
Taken last night.
There's a reference in that article to comments in favour of the proposed changes to our UI system by spokespeople from a group called the Canadian Federation of Independent Business. Here's their Wikipedia page, FWIW.
The page alleges that its founder back in 1971 was one John Bulloch...whose own Wiki page claims him to be a current member of the Georgia State Senate, a claim apparently confirmed by that legislative body's own web service. No direct link And that's all that's present on that Wiki page, again as of 7:40 AM this morning. No direct confirmation that he ever lived in Canada on the Georgia State Senate page, mind you.
He claims Republican affiliation, representing Georgia's 11th District.
If it's indeed the same guy, I'd be interested to know more about the linkages.