Close Menu

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Four dead in two northern B.C. avalanches

    March 24, 2026

    Nova Scotia starts spring week with fresh snowfall

    March 23, 2026

    Quebec budget projects C$8.6 billion deficit

    March 23, 2026
    Edmonton TribuneEdmonton Tribune
    • Automotive

      Nissan develops new self-driving system for urban streets

      September 22, 2025

      Dashboard display fault prompts Toyota recall of 70K vehicles in Canada

      September 20, 2025

      Canada pushes EV rollout with new charging stations

      August 29, 2025

      Tesla sales fall 40 percent in Europe while BYD triples registrations

      August 28, 2025

      Ford recalls over 355000 trucks for dashboard display fault

      August 28, 2025
    • Business

      Quebec budget projects C$8.6 billion deficit

      March 23, 2026

      Canada loses 84,000 jobs as unemployment hits 6.7%

      March 16, 2026

      Canada gains Mexico market for fresh potatoes

      March 14, 2026

      Canada expands steel worker retraining amid tariff strain

      March 13, 2026

      India Canada target trade pact by 2026 and expand energy ties

      March 2, 2026
    • Entertainment

      Critics say Ben Affleck understates AI use in film and TV

      January 27, 2026

      Apple Arcade adds Jeopardy and NFL games in September update

      August 19, 2025

      Marvel’s Fantastic Four opens strong with 57 million dollars

      July 27, 2025

      Disney and Marvel’s R-rated film hits billion-dollar milestone

      August 17, 2024

      Web3 leader Immutable rolls out $50M gaming rewards initiative

      April 27, 2024
    • Health

      Study explains exceptional memory in some people over 80

      January 15, 2026

      Stanford researchers restore cartilage in aging joint models

      January 12, 2026

      Protein shakes show alarming traces of lead and heavy metals

      October 19, 2025

      Scientists discover how exercise curbs hunger through brain

      October 7, 2025

      Premature baby dies in Alberta amid growing measles outbreak

      October 3, 2025
    • Lifestyle

      JP Morgan funds Fresha with $31 million for AI and robotics growth

      August 23, 2024

      Adidas, Highsnobiety debut limited-edition sneakers

      January 6, 2024

      Unraveling Starbucks’ phenomenon as a worldwide coffee powerhouse

      September 1, 2023

      How Nike’s Kobe 8 Protro Halo Marks an Emotional Milestone

      August 29, 2023

      From labels to legacy – understanding fashion’s hierarchy

      August 21, 2023
    • Luxury

      Price hikes and lack of innovation erode luxury market confidence

      November 18, 2024

      Uncover the allure of Rolex Deepsea – luxury awaits.

      April 10, 2024

      Beyond timekeeping to the prestige of the Rolex Day-Date

      March 2, 2024

      Rare uncut emerald dazzles at Sharjah show

      February 1, 2024

      Porsche and Frauscher launch the electric 850 Fantom Air

      October 17, 2023
    • News

      Four dead in two northern B.C. avalanches

      March 24, 2026

      Nova Scotia starts spring week with fresh snowfall

      March 23, 2026

      Canada backs Nova Scotia space launch pad with C$200M

      March 18, 2026

      Canada ER strain deepens after deaths during waits

      March 14, 2026

      Montreal power outages persist after Quebec ice storm

      March 14, 2026
    • Sports

      Victoria Mboko named WTA newcomer of the year 2025

      December 23, 2025

      Trump announces World Cup 2026 draw to be held in US capital

      August 23, 2025

      US Canada Mexico coordinate drone security measures for World Cup 2026

      August 6, 2025

      Russia develops AI robot to boost athletic performance

      July 18, 2025

      Italy’s Jannik Sinner wins first Wimbledon men’s singles crown

      July 14, 2025
    • Technology

      Canada to spend C$900 million on drones and quantum defence

      March 10, 2026

      Google expands Gemini AI in Chrome with task automation features

      January 31, 2026

      Memory driven robots created in Korea to enhance productivity

      October 2, 2025

      Apple iPhone 17 Pro ships with iOS 26 and AI translation

      September 9, 2025

      Google invests $1 billion to boost academic AI access

      August 6, 2025
    • Travel

      Canada cross border trips to U.S. fell sharply in late 2025

      January 28, 2026

      US immigration screening review suspends Pakistan exempts India

      January 15, 2026

      Canada reassures American tourists while U.S. regions scale back Canada marketing

      January 14, 2026

      Banff upgrades transit to address tourist congestion

      October 14, 2025

      Global air travel hits new high with 86 percent load factor

      October 1, 2025
    Edmonton TribuneEdmonton Tribune
    Home » Canada expands steel worker retraining amid tariff strain
    Business

    Canada expands steel worker retraining amid tariff strain

    March 13, 2026
    Facebook WhatsApp Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Telegram Tumblr Email Reddit VKontakte

    OTTAWA: Canada’s steel sector is set to receive C$70 million in retraining and employment support as the federal government moves to cushion workers from tariff-related disruption that hit the industry in 2025 and continues to shape labour policy in 2026. The funding, spread over three years through Labour Market Development Agreements with provinces and territories, is designed to support up to 10,000 steel workers with targeted training, reskilling support, income assistance and job-retention programs tied to tariff impacts and broader market shifts.

    Canada expands steel worker retraining amid tariff strain
    Ottawa advances steel sector job support as Canada responds to ongoing tariff pressure. (AI-generated image)

    The steel-worker package was announced by Ottawa on July 16, 2025 as part of a wider response to escalating trade pressure on Canadian metals. The United States imposed global 25% tariffs on steel and aluminum imports on March 12, 2025, prompting Canada to answer a day later with 25% retaliatory tariffs on C$29.8 billion in U.S. goods. U.S. steel and aluminum tariffs then rose to 50% on June 4, 2025, adding further strain to producers and workers across Canada’s industrial base.

    Federal officials paired the worker funding with broader measures aimed at the steel industry, including tighter tariff-rate quotas on some imported steel, new tariffs on certain non-U.S. steel products containing steel melted and poured in China, and up to C$1 billion through the Strategic Innovation Fund for projects intended to strengthen domestic capacity. Ottawa also said the worker program would focus on mid-career and long-tenured employees and would be developed with provinces, employers and workers to help keep affected employees in the labour market.

    Broader tariff response moves into rollout

    The C$70 million steel package now forms part of the federal Workforce Tariff Response, a C$570 million, three-year program outlined by Employment and Social Development Canada on February 13, 2026. Under that framework, Ottawa allocated C$70 million for steel workers, C$50 million for softwood lumber workers and C$450 million for workers affected by tariffs and global market shifts in other sectors. The federal government said the overall plan is intended to help up to 66,000 workers through training and employment supports delivered through provincial and territorial systems.

    Ontario moved the program into a more visible implementation phase on March 10, 2026, when the province and federal government announced more than C$228 million over three years for the Canada-Ontario Workforce Tariff Response. The Ontario package is set to support up to 27,000 workers and employers in sectors affected by tariffs and trade disruption, including steel, automotive manufacturing and softwood lumber. The announcement tied worker retraining directly to skills upgrading, job retention and measures intended to keep experienced employees attached to key industrial sectors.

    Steel aid sits alongside financing and procurement measures

    Worker support has been rolled out alongside other federal measures meant to steady steel producers facing trade disruption. Ottawa has said its broader steel response includes a Regional Tariff Response Initiative for affected businesses, revised terms under the Large Enterprise Tariff Loan facility, and procurement changes requiring federal contractors, where possible, to source steel from Canadian companies. Budget 2025 also said Algoma Steel would gain access to C$400 million in liquidity through the federal large-enterprise tariff loan program, with Ontario contributing an additional C$100 million under the same terms.

    Taken together, the measures show that the C$70 million retraining plan remains a live part of Canada’s tariff-response strategy rather than a one-time announcement. The steel-worker funding first unveiled in July 2025 is now being carried forward through a larger 2026 labour-market framework that combines retraining, income support and job-retention tools with financing and procurement measures for the industry. The measures are being delivered as federal and provincial governments respond to continued tariff pressure on Canadian steel workers and manufacturers. – By Content Syndication Services.

    Related Posts

    Four dead in two northern B.C. avalanches

    March 24, 2026

    Nova Scotia starts spring week with fresh snowfall

    March 23, 2026

    Quebec budget projects C$8.6 billion deficit

    March 23, 2026

    Canada backs Nova Scotia space launch pad with C$200M

    March 18, 2026

    Canada loses 84,000 jobs as unemployment hits 6.7%

    March 16, 2026

    Canada ER strain deepens after deaths during waits

    March 14, 2026
    Latest News

    Four dead in two northern B.C. avalanches

    March 24, 2026

    Nova Scotia starts spring week with fresh snowfall

    March 23, 2026

    Quebec budget projects C$8.6 billion deficit

    March 23, 2026

    Canada backs Nova Scotia space launch pad with C$200M

    March 18, 2026

    Canada loses 84,000 jobs as unemployment hits 6.7%

    March 16, 2026

    Canada ER strain deepens after deaths during waits

    March 14, 2026
    © 2026 Edmonton Tribune | All Rights Reserved
    • Home
    • Contact Us
    • Disclaimer

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.