Tuesday, June 16, 2026
ADVT 
National

Premiers Open Borders On Apprenticeships, Recognize Training In New Deal

The Canadian Press, 16 Jul, 2015 12:44 PM
    ST. JOHN'S, N.L. — Apprentices will find it easier to move between the provinces and territories while they are doing their training under an agreement signed by the premiers on Thursday.
     
    Premier Paul Davis of Newfoundland and Labrador says the agreement, which takes effect in January, will help Canada build an educated and skilled workforce.
     
    Nova Scotia has been among the provinces pushing for the changes, which it says will recognize the technical training and relevant hours that are needed by an apprentice to complete their training regardless of where it is done in the country.
     
    Students who graduate from pre-apprenticeship training programs will also get full recognition.
     
    Nova Scotia Premier Stephen McNeil says the agreement will help employers find the skilled workers they need and make it easier for people who have left the province to begin an apprenticeship program elsewhere and want to return home to complete their training.
     
    He said people are leaving the province for job opportunities and the new protocol is a step forward for the province.
     
    "People aren't leaving our province because they want to," McNeil added.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ottawa Police Continue Search For 2 Children Allegedly Abducted By Mother

    Ottawa Police Continue Search For 2 Children Allegedly Abducted By Mother
    Ottawa police are continuing their search for two young boys who were the subject of an Amber Alert on Saturday night.

    Ottawa Police Continue Search For 2 Children Allegedly Abducted By Mother

    Ottawa Spent $376K To Repatriate Luka Magnotta In 'National Interest'

    Ottawa Spent $376K To Repatriate Luka Magnotta In 'National Interest'
    OTTAWA — The big-ticket military mission to fetch fugitive Luka Rocco Magnotta from Germany in 2012 was ordered by a senior Conservative cabinet minister who considered it a matter of "national interest," The Canadian Press has learned.

    Ottawa Spent $376K To Repatriate Luka Magnotta In 'National Interest'

    Man In Alleged Halifax Shooting Plot Never Spoke Of Guns: Friend

    Man In Alleged Halifax Shooting Plot Never Spoke Of Guns: Friend
    HALIFAX — A man who went to rock shows with one of the young men alleged to have been planning a Valentine's Day shooting on a Halifax mall says his acquaintance never spoke of guns to him.

    Man In Alleged Halifax Shooting Plot Never Spoke Of Guns: Friend

    Conservative MP Says Fifty Shades Of Grey Supports Violence Against Women

    Conservative MP Says Fifty Shades Of Grey Supports Violence Against Women
    WINNIPEG — A Manitoba MP is calling for a boycott of "Fifty Shades of Grey," claiming the film supports humiliation, degradation and the emotional and physical abuse of women.

    Conservative MP Says Fifty Shades Of Grey Supports Violence Against Women

    Winter Storm Wallops Maritimes While Central Canada Spends Sunday In Deep Freeze

    Winter Storm Wallops Maritimes While Central Canada Spends Sunday In Deep Freeze
    HALIFAX — A savage winter storm pounded Maritimes on Sunday, causing damage, delays and dangerous driving conditions on Sunday while people in parts of southern Ontario and Quebec were braving biting winds and frigid Arctic temperatures.

    Winter Storm Wallops Maritimes While Central Canada Spends Sunday In Deep Freeze

    Canada's Iconic Maple Leaf Flag Turns 50

    OTTAWA - Some mornings, Parliament Hill's flag master likes to see how fast he can trot up 392 stairs in the Peace Tower, raise the Maple Leaf that flies over top, and climb back down.

    Canada's Iconic Maple Leaf Flag Turns 50