To ensure the best use of the province’s limited economic immigration capacity, the Newfoundland...
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To ensure the best use of the province’s limited economic immigration capacity, the Newfoundland...
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The 2024 Federal Budget removed the 2017 top-up funding under the Labour Market Transfer Agreements, resulting in a funding reduction of more than $16.8 million per year for Newfoundland and Labrador.
With the Government of Canada’s decision to cut $625 million in jobs funding nation-wide, almost 200,000 fewer people will be served across the country. Provinces and Territories are now forced to reduce or eliminate funding to service providers, including non-profit community organizations, as well as direct supports to job seekers, workers and employers at a time when acute skills and labour shortages are slowing economic growth, productivity and innovation.
As a result of this federal decision, the Canada-Newfoundland and Labrador Job Grant for employers and workers is suspended until further notice.
“This painful decision to suspend the Canada-Newfoundland and Labrador Job Grant still leaves more than a $15 million shortfall for Newfoundland and Labrador to grapple with, and the status of many other employment programs in question, unless the federal cuts to Labour Market Transfer Agreements are reversed. Across Canada, Provincial and Territorial governments are also grappling to make difficult cuts to much-needed funding that provides employment supports across a variety of groups, including persons with autism, Indigenous groups and persons with disabilities.”
Honourable Gerry Byrne
Minister of Immigration, Population Growth and Skills
Source- gov.nl.ca