LATEST NEWS
Skills Training | Heavy Equipment | Trade Contracting | Engineering
January 27, 2010
Trades training
Fort McMurray college experiences apprenticeship boom
Trades and heavy industrial apprenticeships at Keyano College in Fort McMurray, Alta. have doubled in the last eight years, driven by rapid growth in the construction and operation of oilsands facilities.
“We are blessed with being the training provider in the oilsands region and that translates directly into growth,” said Glenn van’t Wout, dean of trades and heavy industrial division at Keyano College.
“This growth is not in direct proportion to the number of barrels of oil produced, because we can’t grow as fast as the industry in the region. But, there is definitely a correlation.”
Two sets of numbers are used to track the number of apprentices attending the college.
The first is the request for seats in any given trade from the Alberta Apprenticeship Training Board. The second is the number of students, who get training.
In 2000/2001, the government requested that Keyano College provide 504 seats, but 402 students attended.
KEYANO COLLEGE
Process engineering students at Keyano College perform a diagnostic.
In 2008/2009, the government requested 932 seats and 866 students attended a course.
In this eight year period, the number of students attending the trades and heavy industrial division grew by 115 per cent.
The focus of the division is to meet the training needs for operation and maintenance in the oilsands.
However, there is duplication and ties between operations, maintenance and construction trades.
The mobile crane operator program was developed recently in response to the rapid growth of oilsands projects.
In 2008/2009, the college was asked to provide 84 seats for the program, but bumped it to 96, due to a mid-year request for more seats.
It delivered 92 and the program is in its second year.
“It’s a unique trade in so far as before Keyano offered mobile crane training, NAIT (Northern Alberta Institute of Technology) was the only other training provider in the province,” said van’t Wout.
“This program resulted in a dramatic increase in the number of seats offered in the province. Despite the increase, there is still a high demand for seats.”
According to van’t Wout, changes in oilsands technology have a direct effect on programming attendance in those programs.
For example, the original mining method used in the oilsands was based on draglines and bucket-wheel reclaimers. This has been replaced by shovel-and-truck mining.
In response, attendance in the heavy equipment technician apprenticeship program jumped by 168 per cent to 268 in 2008/2009 from 100 apprentices in 2000/2001.
The training for a journeyman welder is directly related to both oilsands construction and operations.
“As a welder the regulations require subsequent tickets in pressure vessel and structural welding,” said van’t Wout.
“Keyano is licensed to test welders for their ability to perform these welds and they must be tested every several years for certification.”
The electrician trade is geared more towards oilsands construction, as opposed to operations and maintenance.
“In other provinces this trade could be defined as a construction electrician, but in Alberta it is defined as just an electrician,” he explained.
“This is a reflection of the synergy between construction and operations.”
In 2000/2001, there were 110 electricians taking apprenticeship training at the college. This number increased by 100 per cent to 220 in 2008/2009.
The mechanical and construction trades preparation program, is also aimed at the construction industry.
In this 24-week program, students get entry-level training, employment skills and a job placement, which helps them choose and prepare for a career in the trades. Each year it includes two groups of 12 students.
To address the demand, Keyano College is planning to build a new $130 million Oil Sands Trades & Technology Centre.
A preliminary business case for the project was submitted in 2009, but there won’t be any government funding for it in the next two years.
To accomplish the expansion, the college will deal with the new centre in a phased approach. Phase one will be the power engineering lab, which will cost about $20 million for the building and equipment.
It is hoped that the first phase will be completed in the summer of 2012.
| MOST POPULAR STORIES |
- International Living Building Institute launches new challenge
- Infrastructure gets funding increase in B.C. Budget 2010
- Society aiming for net zero energy for all new builds by 2030
- Terrane Metals Corp. set to start construction on mine near Fort St. James, British Columbia
- Budget includes $7.7 billion in infrastructure stimulus funding
- 20 Most Popular Stories
| TODAY’S TOP CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS |
These projects have been selected from 342 projects with a total value of $2,911,425,288 that Reed Construction Data Building Reports reported on yesterday.
HOTEL RESORT, GOLF COURSE & WELLNESS CENTRE
$477,000,000 Kelowna BC Prebid
$229,795,000 Edmonton AB Negotiated
$50,000,000 Winnipeg MB Prebid
| CURRENT STORIES |
- Scott Construction continues work on research centre at Vancouver General Hospital
- Independent contractors association criticizes Burnaby’s fair wage policy
- Eastern, central focus of federal budget a concern to industry
- Industry welcomes federal government’s commitment to labour-market tracking
- International Living Building Institute launches new challenge
- International snowplow championship packs ‘em in
- ‘Quality product cannot come from cutting corners on safety’
- Study supports domed stadium for Saskatchewan Roughriders in Regina
- U.S. construction spending drops by $5.5 billion
- Canada BIM Council nears information exchange agreement with U.S. counterpart
- SNC Lavalin awarded Saskatchewan carbon capture project
- Dominion Construction gets two B.C. contracts
- Fraud charges laid against former head of Quebec labour union
- Alberta team wins silver at U.S. bricklaying championship
- New technology allows concrete to come clean
- Ontario Masonry Contractors’ Association launches design awards
- Pursuit of LEED could result in professional negligence, insurance executive warns
- Ontario architects, general contractor associations issue joint HST bulletin
- WSIB report a clear response to ideas we submitted, Ontario General Contractors Association chief says
- McGuinty dismisses NDP land deal allegations
- Historic Kingston Dry Dock restored, enhanced
- Centre for Energy Innovation in Windsor, Ontario built using Termobuild HVAC system
- Canadian Standards Association parking garage standard gets tougher
- Accelerated schedules a challenge for vinyl flooring
- Good materials, shoddy workmanship produces poorly performing floor
| ALEX’S ECONOMICS BLOG |

Reed Construction Data Chief Economist Alex Carrick discusses current developments in the North American economic environment with emphasis on the construction industry.
- A dozen incredible measurement sets on Canada’s changing ethnic mix (March 9, 2010)
- How fragile is recovery around the world? (March 3, 2010)
- The world financial crisis goes into extra innings (February 25, 2010)
- More

| PROJECT NEWS BRIEFS |
Updates on Canadian construction projects from Reed Construction Data’s research team. More 
- Rounthwaite Dick & Hadley Architects begin work on arena plans for Flamborough, Ontario (Aug 17, 2009)
- Orillia Market Square aims for LEED Silver certification (Jun 25, 2009)
- Designs for new York Region District School Board building features energy efficiency (Jun 23, 2009)
- IPC Energy considers Milford location for future wind farm (May 22, 2009)
- Waterloo partnership seeks LEED Silver for West Side Family YMCA and District Library (May 22, 2009)



