Canada’s Greenhouse Labour Shortage Worsens As Cannabis Growers Snap Up Workers

OTTAWA (Reuters) ― Canada’s labour-strapped greenhouse vegetable and flower growers are ramping up efforts to keep and recruit more workers in the face of pressure from the country’s budding cannabis industry, farm groups say.
“Many of the cannabis producers are very cash rich. They’ve got the resources to pay a very good wage,” said Andrew Morse, head of the Flowers Canada industry group.
Canada’s greenhouse, nursery and floriculture sectors employ 16 per cent of all workers in Canadian agriculture. The industry has been grappling with a tight labour supply for years, and the current record low national unemployment rate is compounding the problem.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government legalized cannabis in October 2018 and the industry has been rapidly expanding. The emerging sector, farm groups say, is posing a new challenge for traditional greenhouse growers.
The skills required for working in greenhouses ― whether growing cannabis or flowers or vegetables ― are similar.
Even before cannabis was legalized, the horticulture industry lost $100 million after 2,800 jobs went unfilled in 2014, the Canadian Agriculture Human Resource Council (CAHRC) said, citing the latest data available. That gap is expected to grow to 7,500 workers by 2025, CAHRC said.
Ontario is home to two-thirds of the country’s greenhouse, nursery and floriculture industry. The province’s flower sector is the third-largest in North America, behind California and Florida, growing about $800 million in flowers each year, Morse said.
The lure of cannabis is not only a higher wage, but also the fact that it is a rapidly growing new industry, said Justine Taylor, a manager with the Ontario association that represents tomato, cucumber and pepper growers.
“It’s an exciting new field, it’s very attractive to young people, especially, (those) trying to get into the sector,” Taylor said.
Plenty of jobs and higher wages
Statistics Canada said last year that the cannabis sector was a “budding source of employment,” with some 10,400 workers in November 2018, just after legalization, a 266 per cent increase from a year earlier. There is no cannabis labour data yet for 2019.
Last year, the average hourly wage for employees in cannabis-related jobs was $29.58, almost 10 per cent higher than the national average, StatCan said.
The most acute labour gaps are in middle management, Taylor said, so greenhouse operators are “putting a lot more resources into recruiting,” including overseas……..(Readmore)

Canada’s Greenhouse Labour Shortage Worsens As Cannabis Growers Snap Up Workers

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