Education, or bust, for the district of Timiskaming.

AuthorCirtwill, Charles
PositionThink Tank

The first in a series of papers Northern Policy Institute has commissioned in partnership with all six Northern workforce planning boards outlines some serious challenges in the Timiskaming District. The authors conclude that, to borrow a phrase, absent significant improvements in rural education outcomes, the region is facing "a future of people without jobs and jobs without people."

Recent technological change and the emergence of the knowledge economy will continue to increase the number of jobs that require post-secondary credentials to roughly 77.1 per cent of all jobs by 2030. The Timiskaming region is significantly below these levels.

The "human capital composition," or the level of skills and education that the working-age population has in the Timiskaming District is lower than regional, provincial and national levels. Worse, it is projected to continue declining if educational attainment remains at its current levels.

As in many areas of Northern Ontario, one of the keys to avoiding this bleak outlook is the Aboriginal population in the region. The authors project that between 2013 and 2041 the Aboriginal population in Timiskaming District will increase by 26 per cent, while the total population will decline by seven per cent. In that same period, the Aboriginal labour force will increase by 10 per cent, while the total labour force will decline by 32 per cent.

However, the Aboriginal population has lower levels of educational achievement than the rest of the population. In fact, the entire population in Timiskaming District is undereducated compared to Ontario and to Canada. Only 54 per cent of the labour force in this district have postsecondary credentials. That is 10 points lower than the percentage holding those qualifications elsewhere in Canada. The Aboriginal population lags another eight points below that, with only 46 per cent of this group having post-secondary qualifications.

The report does highlight some good news in the region. Despite the population-wide challenges, employment in Timiskaming's mining, oil and gas extraction industries nearly doubled from 555 in 2001 to 1,095 in 2011 (the latest data available). The region enjoys significant natural resources, good agricultural opportunities, and solid access to the large North American market. Timiskaming's long-term prosperity and growth depend on its ability to utilize and refocus...

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