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	<title>News</title>
	<link>http://www.weesociety.ca/index_ee.php/news</link>
	<description></description>
	<dc:language>en</dc:language>
	<dc:creator>peter@eastwooddesign.com</dc:creator>
	<dc:rights>Copyright 2011</dc:rights>
	<dc:date>2011-11-03T14:35:43+00:00</dc:date>
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	<item>
	  <title>Women Unlimited Visit Shipyard</title>
	  <link>http://www.weesociety.ca/index_ee.php/news/comments/women_unlimited_visit_shipyard</link>
	  <guid>http://www.weesociety.ca/index_ee.php/news/comments/women_unlimited_visit_shipyard#When:14:36:32Z</guid>
	  <description><![CDATA[<p>
	Halifax Shipyard recently hosted a tour to more than 40 women from the Nova Scotia Community College (NSCC) group Women Unlimited. The group visited the shipyard to learn about the available employment opportunities in the shipbuilding industry.</p>
<p>
	Women Unlimited assists women with barriers to employment to explore, prepare, obtain and maintain employment in the trades and technology fields.</p>
<p>
	Over the past few years Irving Shipbuilding has hired four women who completed this program and discovered they had an interest in the industry.</p>
<p>
	We received positive remarks that the women enjoyed the tour and learned a lot about the shipbuilding industry.</p>
<p>
	Found at: <a href="http://shipsstarthere.ca/2011/06/09/women-unlimited-visit-shipyard/">http://shipsstarthere.ca/2011/06/09/women-unlimited-visit-shipyard/</a></p>
]]></description> 
	  <dc:subject></dc:subject>
	  <dc:date>2011-11-03T14:36:32+00:00</dc:date>
	</item>

	<item>
	  <title>Shipbuilding contract sparks excitement at NSCC</title>
	  <link>http://www.weesociety.ca/index_ee.php/news/comments/shipbuilding_contract_sparks_excitement_at_nscc</link>
	  <guid>http://www.weesociety.ca/index_ee.php/news/comments/shipbuilding_contract_sparks_excitement_at_nscc#When:14:35:43Z</guid>
	  <description><![CDATA[<p>
	Students in the NSCC Akerley Campus welding class see a bright future in thier trade after a $25-billion shipbuilding contract was awarded to the Irving Shipyard in Halifax. (Darrell Oake)</p>
<p>
	Sparks are flying in the community college welding lab these days, and it&rsquo;s not just from the cutting torches. Excitement is high among many students at the Nova Scotia Community College now that Halifax has won the lion&rsquo;s share of a coveted shipbuilding contract.</p>
<p>
	&ldquo;We&rsquo;re all very excited to get into the industry and start our careers. That&rsquo;s what we&rsquo;ve been working toward these last few years,&rdquo; said 22-year-old who is Samantha Thurber of Halifax, who&rsquo;s enroled in NSCC&rsquo;s welding and metal fabrication course at the Akerley Campus in Dartmouth.</p>
<p>
	Welding is just one of the many skills the Halifax Shipyard will be looking for in the coming years. Last week, Ottawa announced that Irving Shipbuilding in Halifax will receive the $25-billion naval vessel building contract for six-to- eight Arctic offshore patrol ships, and up to 15 replacements for the Iroquois-class destroyers and Halifax-class frigates. The contract is projected to bring 11,500 jobs to Nova Scotia during peak production in 2020. Seaspan Marine in Vancouver was awarded the $8-billion contract for building coast guard and other non-navy ships.</p>
<p>
	NSCC president Don Bureaux said the shipbuilding contract will be a great incentive to community college students right across the province. &ldquo;A project this large simply cannot be met in Halifax alone,&rdquo; Bureaux said. Bureaux said for the past decade, the NSCC has been built on the premise of being flexible in response to labour market demands.</p>
<p>
	&ldquo;When we see a niche or we see a major initiative that requires skilled labour, we have been built on a culture and on an ethos, that we are here to respond,&rdquo; he said. Bureaux said NSCC plans to meet with Irving officials at the Halifax Shipyard, and the college&rsquo;s government partners to see just what kind of skills will be needed when ship construction begins. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll be looking at what the needs are going to be, and what our capacity is to bring those two worlds together,&rdquo; he said.</p>
<p>
	Thurber said she&rsquo;s looking forward to making a career out of what she&rsquo;s been learning, and is grateful to be there. Thurber applied to the welding course three years ago, and did not make it in. A year later with help from Women Unlimited &mdash; a career development program for unemployed or under employed women &mdash; Thurber is on her way. &ldquo;I pretty much knew I&rsquo;d be going into welding. I got here and I ran a few beads, and I loved it, and I&rsquo;ve been doing great ever since,&rdquo; she said.</p>
<p>
	Michael Innes, a 21-year-old welding student from Bedford admits he wasn&rsquo;t the best student, and when he got out of high school he didn&rsquo;t know what he wanted to do. &ldquo;I worked for a couple of years in a warehouse, and one day a neighbour asked &lsquo;What are you doing with your life?&rsquo; and suggested taking up welding.&rdquo; When he applied two-and-a-half years ago, there was a year wait to get it, but once he was there Innes knew he&rsquo;d found his career.</p>
<p>
	Right from the start, Innes said, students were being told about the opportunities that the shipbuilding contracts would bring. &ldquo;And it&rsquo;s all following through, and now there&rsquo;s going to be jobs everywhere,&rdquo; said Innes, who will be graduating later this year. He said he&rsquo;d recommend a career in welding to anyone. &ldquo;I like the sense of accomplishment in building something at the end of the day,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve enjoyed it since I started last year. This is just a great program all round.&rdquo; <a href="mailto:kmoar@hfxnews.ca">kmoar@hfxnews.ca</a></p>
<p>
	<a href="http://www.halifaxnewsnet.ca/News/2011-10-24/article-2784967/Shipbuilding-contract-sparks-excitement-at-NSCC-/1">http://www.halifaxnewsnet.ca/News/2011-10-24/article-2784967/Shipbuilding-contract-sparks-excitement-at-NSCC-/1</a></p>
]]></description> 
	  <dc:subject></dc:subject>
	  <dc:date>2011-11-03T14:35:43+00:00</dc:date>
	</item>

	<item>
	  <title>Welcome mat is out for women in the trades</title>
	  <link>http://www.weesociety.ca/index_ee.php/news/comments/welcome_mat_is_out_for_women_in_the_trades</link>
	  <guid>http://www.weesociety.ca/index_ee.php/news/comments/welcome_mat_is_out_for_women_in_the_trades#When:14:13:18Z</guid>
	  <description><![CDATA[<p>
	BY KIM MOAR &ndash; THE WEEKLY NEWS<br />
	When it comes to women working in the trades, the welcome mat is out, says the head of Nova Scotia Homebuilder&rsquo;s Association.<br />
	&ldquo;There&rsquo;s a tremendous market for those women out there thinking about it,&rdquo; Paul Petti- pas said. &ldquo;The old stigma of women not being able to work in the trades because they&rsquo;re not strong enough just doesn&rsquo;t make any sense. When you&rsquo;re on a job site, most people don&rsquo;t lift heavy loads, there&rsquo;s cranes and other people to help them.&rdquo;</p>
]]></description> 
	  <dc:subject></dc:subject>
	  <dc:date>2011-11-03T14:13:18+00:00</dc:date>
	</item>

	<item>
	  <title>New NSCC trade building opens in Sydney</title>
	  <link>http://www.weesociety.ca/index_ee.php/news/comments/new_nscc_trade_building_opens_in_sydney</link>
	  <guid>http://www.weesociety.ca/index_ee.php/news/comments/new_nscc_trade_building_opens_in_sydney#When:19:30:07Z</guid>
	  <description><![CDATA[<p>
	By MARY ELLEN MacINTYRE Cape Breton Bureau Marconi campus addition good fit for shipbuilding project SYDNEY &mdash; Somebody was thinking ahead.<br />
	Just a week after Nova Scotia won the $25-billion federal shipbuilding contract, the new $7-million trades building at Nova Scotia Community College&rsquo;s Marconi Campus officially opened. Don Bureaux, head of NSCC said Friday at the opening ceremonies, timing appears to be everything. &ldquo;A couple of years ago, Dave MacLean (Marconi campus principal) had a vision,&rdquo; said Bureaux. &ldquo;He told me there would be a need in the future for more trades people,&rdquo; said Bureaux. The principal told him the need for an expanded wing and new facilities for certain trades was a high priority.<br />
	The province chipped in $7 million toward the new wing, the federal government contributed $1 million and two years later, the building was completed.<br />
	Bureaux said the head of Irving Shipyards called him just last year to say the company was going to make a bid for the large federal contract. &ldquo;And now both announcements come within a week of each other,&rdquo; said Bureaux.<br />
	The 2,493-square-metre trades building houses classrooms, shops and offices for students enrolled in metal fabrication, welding, heavy duty truck and transport, automotive service and repair and motorcycle and power products repair.<br />
	First-year students Meg Carroll-Andrews of New Waterford and Phil Sophocleous of Sydney looked on as the opening ceremony began. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m in the first year of electrical construction and this program will make a big difference in my life and in my little girl&rsquo;s,&rdquo; said Carroll-Andrews (a graduate of the Women Unlimited program.) &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll be able to afford things with this kind of trade and put some savings in the bank for my daughter,&rdquo; she said. Having previously worked in retail businesses and call centres, she believes with her trade and the prospects for the Nova Scotia economy, her quality of life will improve many times over.<br />
	Phil Sophocleous feels the same way. The 23-year-old is enrolled in the automotive service repair course. &ldquo;Making ten bucks an hour, it&rsquo;s just hard to get by,&rdquo; said Sophocleous. &ldquo;I worked in retail for years at Sobeys, Wal-Mart, McDonald&rsquo;s and there&rsquo;s just no money in that,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve learned so much already about the way an engine works,&rdquo; he said.<br />
	Deputy premier Frank Corbett, Senator Michael MacDonald, Bureaux and principal Dave MacLean took part in the &ldquo;ribbon&rdquo; cutting ceremony. The so- called ribbon was a piece of plate steel which was fed into a massive cutter in the metal fabrication shop. (<a href="mailto:mmacintyre@herald.ca">mmacintyre@herald.ca</a>)</p>
]]></description> 
	  <dc:subject></dc:subject>
	  <dc:date>2011-10-28T19:30:07+00:00</dc:date>
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