Quebec premier takes heat for paying students to ‘renovate their basement’
MONTREAL — The Quebec government is facing criticism for a program that paid students to learn a construction skill — as less than half the graduates are certified to work in the industry.
After it was recently revealed the program fell far short of its target, Parti Québécois Leader Paul St-Pierre Plamondon on Tuesday accused the government of creating an “all-inclusive, all-paid package” that students can use “to go and renovate (their) cottage or renovate (their) basement.”
Last fall, Quebec Premier François Legault announced a new, $300-million fast-track program to train between 4,000 and 5,000 new construction workers, in an attempt to address an ongoing labour shortage. Students are paid $750 a week to attend accelerated training programs lasting four to six months.
But the program doesn’t include a requirement to work in the industry after graduation, and nearly one year later, Quebec’s construction commission reports that just 1,251 of the program’s graduates are working in construction, including 1,017 who are new to the industry.