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There has long been a stigma associated with the trades that it is for poor and/or uneducated people...

Perpetuated by the fact it's hard to find good quality workmanship; which itself is perpetuated by a shortage of workers and a drive for quantity over quality...

I can't tell you the number of mistakes I catch when having work done on the property. Incredibly frustrating. One has to do most of the work beforehand and tell them exactly what needs to be done... And still watch with a hawk's eye and double/triple check that it is done right.
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By the way, if anyone knows how to get someone to replace an exhaust vent cover 35+ feet above ground, narrowly between a couple of houses (<4'), I'd love to know, because I've searched high and low, including roofers, etc., to no avail to find anyone to do the job.
 
Perpetuated by the fact it's hard to find good quality workmanship; which itself is perpetuated by a shortage of workers and a drive for quantity over quality...
By trades I think the onus is on skilled, ticketed and regulated trades rather than handypersons. Welders, elevator mechs, electricians, etc. That’s where the money is.
 
By trades I think the onus is on skilled, ticketed and regulated trades rather than handypersons. Welders, elevator mechs, electricians, etc. That’s where the money is.

Unionized trade jobs is where the money is. Don't believe the "trades are desperate" BS. Companies are desperate for more foreign workers they can abuse and pay lower wages. As long as goverment allows immigrants to fill the “void” nothing will change. Why train someone that will eventually want a high wage when you can import cheap labour.
 
Unionized trade jobs is where the money is.
Pretty much every skilled trade is protected by a union or guild. Our one-time international student or TFW may graduate from DoorDash to a construction site, but he’s working the security gate or a shovel. If you don’t have the skills training and regulatory tickets, you can’t get into the unions or get anywhere near a torch, tower crane, junction box, etc. and the higher salaries they demand.
 
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Pretty much every skilled trade is protected by a union or guild. Our one-time international student or TFW may graduate from DoorDash to a construction site, but he’s working the gate or a shovel. If you don’t have the skills training and regulatory tickets, you can’t get into the unions or get anywhere near a torch, tower crane, junction box, etc. and the higher salaries they demand.

My cousin is a plumber who got into it after working at Swiss Chalet as a cook. He went to school, learned plumbing but after many years he is still in school pursuing things.

The days where you can walk onto a construction site and get hired under the table are long gone.
 
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Well, Mike is the extreme, lol.
Mike's a poor example, as he never had any tickets (certs) and no permits to do the work he purportedly did on his reno show.

 
Well, Mike is the extreme, lol. But I certainly know a number of electricians, plumbers, HVAC, carpenters etc who have done quite well. It's hard, physical labour, but it's a great career. Unfortunately, it's been difficult to get Ontario governments truly on side.
The first 'rich guy' I knew growing up was an electrician.

The likes of Holmes, Baumler or McGillvray are entrepreneurial renovation contractors (well, they started out that way and turned into infotainment purveyors). I'm not aware that any of them hold trade tickets. They might have ticket holders working for them or contracted to them, but they would get inspected just like you and I.
 
In response to concerns that the government's cuts to OSAP may be a bit harsh, the Premiers' advice was not to choose a basket-weaving course.

The Beaverton Responds:

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Some of my ancestors were highly skilled basket weavers, but hey, Ford has never been skilled with words and his lack of education has reflected that on many occasions. HE truly is an uneducated dunce.
Doug Ford wants to kill the Easter Basket industry.
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Key markets for Easter Basket consumption currently include the US, Germany, Italy, and Poland, where baskets are used for festive hunts or to bless food. Why shouldn't Ontario build its own Easter Basket industry? Need basket weavers to do that.
 

Ontario Premier Doug Ford says he “can’t wait” for midterm elections in the United States, after a Supreme Court ruling on tariffs did little to alleviate trade pressure on the provincial economy.

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A ruling from America’s top court on Friday concluded President Donald Trump’s so-called “reciprocal” tariffs and duties on Canada related to fentanyl were unlawful, without touching sector-specific tariffs.

Tariffs imposed on steel, aluminum and autos, known as Section 232, are unaffected by the ruling. An additional 15 per cent tariff, which the president announced Saturday, largely does not impact Canadian products.

“The Supreme Court hasn’t changed, thankfully, anything here in Ontario or in Canada,” Premier Ford told reporters. “We’re still keeping an eye on Section 232, but don’t make no mistake about it. President Trump still has a lot of tools.”

Despite the broad strike-down of Trump’s tariffs, the levies that most impact Ontario remain in place.

The premier appeared again on CNN on Monday as part of his drive to convince American voters and elected officials to lobby on Canada’s and Ontario’s behalf.

It’s a strategy the provincial government has been pursuing for more than a year without yet seeing movement on tariffs. Ford has cancelled a contract with Elon Musk’s Starlink, removed American alcohol from the LCBO and visited Washington D.C.

The premier has said the hope of that strategy is to work around Trump’s unpredictability.

“It’s very challenging right now,” he said. “I just sit back some days, and I’m not the only one, everyone in the world sits back, (wondering) how can one person, one man create so much turmoil around the world? Not just here in Canada, around the globe. It’s pretty, pretty staggering. So, I can’t wait for the midterms.”
 


On Monday, Ontario Premier Doug Ford continued to reject concerns about his government’s recent changes to the Ontario Student Assistance Program (OSAP). He highlighted an indigenous-oriented basket weaving course at Carleton University as a ''wasteful'' use of OSAP money.
 

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