Steel Shutdown: where are Hamilton's jobs?
What occupations are in demand and what sectors are hiring?
In light of the last week’s news of U.S. Steel shutting down its Hamilton steel manufacturing operation, its Work Week at CBC Hamilton. We are taking a look at jobs in Hamilton: where they have gone, what remains, and which industries are desperate for employees.
WHERE ARE THE OPENINGS?
Here are the top three categories
RETAIL
MANUFACTURING (food, machinery and primary metal)
HEALTH CARE (nursing and in-home care)
Source: Workforce Planning Hamilton
Looking for work in Hamilton? Between July to September of this year, there were 6,742 unique job vacancies in Hamilton posted online. That’s according to Workforce Planning Hamilton’s latest report on worker demand in the city. That's about 640 more than the previous quarter.
That’s over 2,000 jobs per month, at least in the past six months, and that is just a small snapshot of available jobs in Hamilton, said Judy Travis, executive director of Workforce Planning Hamilton.
From their latest online job vacancy report, retail, manufacturing (food, machinery and primary metal) and health care (nursing and in-home care) were the industries with the most available jobs. About 53 per cent of those positions are full-time.
So, what kind of jobs are they? They're jobs at either end of the market.
“It’s a two-tier system,” Travis said. “There are lots of jobs at the low level and lots of jobs at the high level."
What is steadily increasing is the number of jobs requiring skills and a specified level of education, often higher than a high school diploma, she said.
53 per cent of online jobs posted are full time.
Most of the current vacant positions, Travis said, are ones with a high-turn over rate, like a salesperson, a food counter attendant or truck driver.
These she said, are often the jobs people without skills get stuck in. A laid-off labour worker from the steel mills could be one of those people.
“Depending on how long they worked their job, they might not even have computer skills,” she said. “There aren’t that many jobs that don’t require those skills.”
Wage is another issue. A former labour worker might end up in the retail trade, Travis said, and “earn half of what they made a U.S. Steel.”
But if a former steel worker with a trade skill went job seeking, this person would have no problem finding work, she said.
Skills and trades in demand
That’s what Mohawk College graduates from trade skills are finding as well. Brad MacDonald is the coordinator for the college’s building and renovation program. He said he has a better than 100 per cent employment rate for his students.
“This year, I had employers calling me up after the main hiring season,” MacDonald said. “There seems to be still a demand.”
MacDonald said the case is the same for graduates in the college’s architectural and civil engineering programs. And most of these jobs are in the Hamilton area.
“We may not be making steel in town, but there is a demand for the trades,” he said.
Hamilton's most prevalent occupations (from Workforce Planning Hamilton)
Occupation | Labour force in Hamilton | Median annual income |
---|---|---|
Retail salesperson | 11,440 | $13,416 |
Food counter attendant | 6,770 | $8,305 |
Elementary school and kindergarten teachers | 5, 670 | $61,103 |
Retail and wholesale trade managers | 5,395 | $39,390 |
Cashiers | 5,330 | $8,602 |
Registered nurses and registered psychiatric nurses | 5,200 | $62,493 |
Transport truck drivers | 4,225 | $38,667 |
Administrative assistants | 3,990 | $34,562 |
Janitors, caretakers and building superintendents | 3,855 | $28,794 |
Administrative officers | 3,735 | $41,659 |
The annual income to satisfy Hamilton's living wage is $29,153.