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Site C workforce steady near 4,800 in September

The workforce at Site C saw a slight dip in September as the project heads into another winter season. There were 4,790 workers counted on the project, down by 80 month over month from August.
sitec
Penstock assembly at Site C, Sept. 17, 2019.

The workforce at Site C saw a slight dip in September as the project heads into another winter season.

There were 4,790 workers counted on the project, down by 80 month over month from August.

Of those, 869 were Peace Region residents employed as construction and non-construction contractors, a decrease of 18 month-over-month, and representing 18% of the project’s total workforce.

Locals make up 21% of the construction and non-construction workforce total of 4,057 workers, which includes work at the dam site, on transmission corridors, reservoir clearing, public roadworks, and camp accommodations.

There were a total of 3,634 workers from B.C., or 76%, working for construction and non-construction contractors, and in engineering and project team jobs.

BC Hydro reports 185 apprentices, 401 indigenous workers, and 517 women workers on the project.

There were seven temporary foreign workers employed in specialized positions, BC Hydro reported, and another 60 managers and other professionals working under the federal international mobility program, it said.

The bulk of the project's construction and non-construction workforce continues to be heavy equipment operators, with 800 employed on the project. There were another 550 labourers and 400 engineers tallied. There were nearly 600 carpenters and scaffolders employed, and another 300 construction managers and supervisors.

Workforce numbers are collected monthly from contractors, which are also required under contract to report on indigenous inclusion and women participation on the project.
The figures do not include indirect or induced employment, BC Hydro says, while figures are not broken down by full-time or part-time work.

View the employment report in full by clicking here.

Email Managing Editor Matt Preprost at [email protected]

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