Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. to spend $136M on skills training complex at BCIT

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Feb, 2022 05:01 PM
  • B.C. to spend $136M on skills training complex at BCIT

VICTORIA - The British Columbia government is spending more than $136 million to build a new trades and technology training complex in Burnaby.

Premier John Horgan said the complex at the British Columbia Institute of Technology's campus will help more than 12,000 full- and part-time students a year in 20 trades and technology programs.

"Every sector of our economy is crying out for more people," he told a news conference Thursday.

"More people are coming here than have come in decades. And that is not likely to stop."

Canada's latest census showed British Columbia had the second-highest population growth among the provinces. B.C.'s population rose by 7.6 per cent between 2016 and 2021. 

                                                            WATCH VIDEO BELOW: 

The government's latest labour market outlook showed eight out of every 10 new openings in the next decade will require post-secondary education or skills training.

The outlook also forecasted more than one million job openings over the next decade. It said about 63 per cent of those openings will replace people who retire.

Horgan said more people are working today than when the pandemic began.

“And our economic vision has always been to put people right at the centre of everything that we do. We cannot have economic growth that leaves people behind."

The government released a 40-page report outlining steps that will be taken to fill jobs over the next decade by targeting areas such as forestry, skills and trade, and technology.

The premier said the pandemic and other recent events have exposed vulnerabilities in society and things cannot go back to the way they were.

"The last two years of the pandemic and the extreme weather events of the past couple of years have changed our lives, changed our economy and changed our future," Horgan said.

"What we've heard coming through the pandemic is that businesses need workers. Without a strong, skilled workforce, our economy will sputter and stumble. We want to avoid that."

For the plan to succeed, he said it needs structures that support talent such as affordable housing and child care, better infrastructure such as roads, transit, hospitals and education institutions.

The plan has six "missions" to help growth that include meeting the province's climate commitments, building resilient communities and meaningful reconciliation with Indigenous Peoples.

The report also said the government is working to connect all B.C. communities to high-speed internet to help business expansion.

Bridgitte Anderson, president of the Greater Vancouver Board of Trade, responded to the government's plan, saying it is short on details about what actions will be taken to spur growth.

"The pandemic has been challenging, especially for small- and medium-sized firms struggling with lower sales, increased debt and higher costs," she said in a statement.

"We believe a long-term economic strategy also needs to focus on tax reform, regulatory policies, and the overall cost of doing business — issues the business community has long championed."

Photo courtesy of Instagram

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Boeing told fighter bid did not meet requirements

Boeing told fighter bid did not meet requirements
Three sources from industry and government say the message was delivered Wednesday as the other two companies competing for the $19-billion contract — U.S. defence giant Lockheed Martin and Swedish firm Saab — were told they met the government’s requirements.    

Boeing told fighter bid did not meet requirements

B.C. opens major highway section in Fraser Valley

B.C. opens major highway section in Fraser Valley
The provincial government says the section of Highway 1 between Chilliwack and Abbotsford has been cleared to reopen and that will connect the Lower Mainland to Highway 3 as major road routes continue to be rebuilt from last week's floods.

B.C. opens major highway section in Fraser Valley

People on B.C. Highway 8 facing long-term disaster

People on B.C. Highway 8 facing long-term disaster
The Nicola River, which runs along flood-damaged Highway 8, has changed course and left some farms underwater, Rice says. A subsequent mudslide wiped out the highway and destroyed or damaged dozens of properties in the area.    

People on B.C. Highway 8 facing long-term disaster

RCMP say B.C. shooting suspect in custody

RCMP say B.C. shooting suspect in custody
Police say a suspect is in custody after officers responded to reports of a shooter at an RCMP detachment in northern British Columbia Cpl. Madonna Saunderson says there are no reported injuries at this time.

RCMP say B.C. shooting suspect in custody

Man shot in driveway in South Surrey

Man shot in driveway in South Surrey
On November 25, 2021,  at approximately 12:00 p.m., Surrey RCMP responded the report of a shooting in the 2900-block of 160 Street. One man was shot in the driveway of a residence. The victim was taken to local hospital with what is believed to be non-life threatening injuries.

Man shot in driveway in South Surrey

Canada's homicide rate jumped in 2020: StatCan

Canada's homicide rate jumped in 2020: StatCan
The new survey says 743 homicides were reported by Canadian police in 2020 — a figure that was the most since 1991 and includes the 22 victims of a gunman's rampage that began in Portapique, N.S., in April of last year.

Canada's homicide rate jumped in 2020: StatCan