“A strong role for clean, affordable, reliable nuclear power will help sustain a highly-trained workforce and a robust, diversified economy, which is important to communities across Ontario and around the Bruce Power site in particular,” said Patrick Dillon, business manager and secretary-treasurer of the Provincial Building and Construction Trades Council of Ontario (in photo signing collaborative agreement, with Duncan Hawthorne, president and chief executive officer of Bruce Power).
“The Bruce Power site is a source of thousands of jobs for our members but our relationship goes beyond that as we both share a number of similar strategic goals.”
Bruce Power and Ontario’s Building and Construction Trades formally signed the collaboration agreement in Hamilton, Sept. 9, with special guest the Honourable Kevin Flynn, Ontario minister of labour.
“This agreement is a good example of what we can all achieve by working together,” said Flynn. “Achieving these shared goals allows Bruce Power to continue to play an important role in Ontario and strengthen our economy and trades throughout the province.”
The Bruce site is home to a number of building and construction trades, including boilermakers, carpenters, electricians, insulators, ironworkers and rodmen, labourers, millwrights, operating engineers, painters, pipefitters/plumbers, sheet metal and roofers, and teamsters.
Over the past 14 years, Bruce Power developed a strong working relationship with these trades, including the Provincial Building and Construction Trades Council of Ontario, with millions of hours of tradesperson work being carried out on the Bruce site.
“In order to maintain eight units of operation that currently provide over 30 per cent of Ontario’s electricity at 30 per cent below the average cost of electricity, we will need to continue to work closely together to carry out millions of hours of trades work,” said Duncan Hawthorne, president and CEO of Bruce Power (in photo signing the agreement, with Patrick Dillon, business manager and secretary-treasurer of the Provincial Building and Construction Trades Council of Ontario.
“This agreement will help lay the groundwork for a successful future for all of us but, more importantly, builds on the very progressive relationship we have had over the past 14 years and outlines a number of key goals we look forward to achieving together.”
The collaboration agreement focuses on the following areas:
Continuing to deliver strong safety performance through the shared value of ‘Safety First.’
Ensuring the necessary availability of skilled trades in the short-, medium- and long-term by promoting recruitment, training and apprenticeships.
Working together collaboratively to ensure the successful execution of projects on the site.
Increasing the diversity within the trades with a particular focus on Aboriginal people, women and visible minorities.
Creating opportunities for former military service members to find careers within the skilled trades.

Ontario labour minister Kevin Flynn (C) joins the Provincial Building and Construction Trades Council of Ontario and Bruce Power in the signing of a collaborative agreement, Sept. 9; photos courtesy of Bruce Power
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