Plans are underway to make sure┬аhealth-care workers┬аrecruited from Kenya will have what┬аthey need to start their new lives in Nova Scotia following a provincial recruitment trip┬аto refugee camps, as well as the capital Nairobi.
Housing should be┬аavailable┬аbefore people arrive, according to the federal program that jump-started┬аthe hiring initiative.┬аThat’s why long-term care provider MacLeod Group has bought three homes for its workers in┬аMahone Bay and is in the market for more.
“We are doing this to try to retain employees as well,” explained Doug Stephens, MacLeod Group’s general manager of human resources.┬а“We thought it was important we look at housing options within our community.”
MacLeod Group health services, which was part of the delegation to Kenya in October, has made about 50 job┬аoffers. In total, conditional job offers have been made to about 90 people who are now going through the immigration process to work as continuing care assistants. This total includes 65┬аoffers┬аrecently announced by the province.
It has been trying all of the traditional hiring methods but has not been able to find enough qualified staff through those.
“We realized we needed to be more creative in our recruitment initiatives,” said┬аStephens.
‘These are people that already have trained skills’
MacLeod operates 13 long-term care and private retirement facilities in the Maritimes and is building a new one in Mahone Bay that is expected to open in late summer or early fall.
That facility alone requires about 120 staff, a┬аbig jump from the 60 employees currently working at its existing site in the community.┬а
“The need to double our workforce has been a challenge for us,” Stephens said. “These are people that already have trained skills and are looking for an opportunity to use those skills.”
He met some of those people in October at the Kakuma camp in the country’s northwest where about 250,000 displaced people are living after fleeing Somalia, Burundi, Congo, Ethiopia and Sudan, among the countries.
“Some were doing home care, some were doing public health work, some were working in trauma centres. So there is a wide range of experience,” he said, adding the new employees will add to the diversity of the community when they arrive.
All of those moving to Nova Scotia will be able to work as continuing care assistants (CCAs) when they get here, and┬аwill then work toward┬аgetting certified as CCA’s.
“They will go through our recognized prior learning process. Their academics and work experience would be assessed to determine the appropriate training they need once they arrive,” said Heather Jussup, a senior human resources┬аconsultant with the Health Association of Nova Scotia and the program lead for the recruitment and retention program.
Jussup was also on the trip to Kenya.
All of the applicants are from nursing or continuing care backgrounds and needed to demonstrate minimum language skills to receive conditional offers, she said.
The first workers could arrive in the next few months
The workers are being recruited through the Economic Mobility Pathways Pilot which identifies refugees who have skills and offers a number of supports to help them immigrate to Canada as permanent residents.
Under the program, about fourteen workers have arrived in Pictou County in the past year and a half where they have already been making a big difference, according to Sean Fraser, who is an MP in the area and the minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship.┬а
“I have seen it with my own eyes. There are people who are able to receive care in a long-term care facility in my community that are now still living in the same community where their grandkids are being raised because they have access to a talented person who is helping provide care,” Fraser said.
The MacLeod┬аGroup is hoping to welcome its first few workers in the next couple of months, Stephens said.
The rest are expected to land in Canada later this year and will head to work┬аwith MacLeod┬аGroup and various employers throughout Nova Scotia.┬а