afransen
Senior Member
I think I had it in May (contracted from close contact at work), though I repeatedly tested negative on rapid tests.
Anyways, what are your thoughts on this? CBC article about ArriveCAN.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/business/arrivecan-american-tourists-niagara-falls-1.6568236
So is Tuesday the big "return to office" day? There's lots of media talking about it as such, though where I work they set the date next week instead, but it will still be a minimum of two days in the office per week, one of which must be Tuesday, escalating to three days minimum in "a few months" (probably January). I note about 33% of the staff have already been coming in at least two days per week since the spring. There's also about 33% of the staff who have rarely been in the office at all, with a handful not being in the office once since March 2020.
It will be very interesting to see how all this plays out as there really is some factionalised office politics developing over the whole thing.
Expect a wave of resignations. Despite corporations pushing hard to be “back to normal”, workers have begun to understand their worth, and how to use that to their advantage.It feels a bit like a game of chicken between management and staff in many workplaces; as well as companies trying to reach out to competitors to insure everyone is moving in lockstep so employees can't jump to stay work-from-home, or 1-day a week in office.
Expect a wave of resignations. Despite corporations pushing hard to be “back to normal”, workers have begun to understand their worth, and how to use that to their advantage.
Unemployment is still insanely low despite all of that. Employees want more now, and employers looking to act like the last two and a half years didn’t happen are gonna have a rude awakening.
It cuts both ways. Many corporations have spent huge sums on tech upgrades and automation in the past two years, and some employees may discover they actually don't have the bargaining power they think they do, or what they did have before the pandemic.Expect a wave of resignations. Despite corporations pushing hard to be “back to normal”, workers have begun to understand their worth, and how to use that to their advantage.
Unemployment is still insanely low despite all of that. Employees want more now, and employers looking to act like the last two and a half years didn’t happen are gonna have a rude awakening.
Oh yeah, I've seen that in the financial industry at many levels. All these banks have had offices and staff in India for years and they have a long list of people ready and willing to pay to move to Canada who can fill open positions here.As well, Canada is ramping up both immigration, and foreign worker programs to near unprecedented levels; which may affect people's replacability in some sectors.
One they have PR they are likely to churn out. The GTA is a hard place to live while being underpaid.Oh yeah, I've seen that in the financial industry at many levels. All these banks have had offices and staff in India for years and they have a long list of people ready and willing to pay to move to Canada who can fill open positions here.
Sometimes it's even ex-staff who moved here and are now looking for a job; the banks simply offer it to them so they can come back and restart their career. The bank office where I work now has well over 5% of the staff in Canada (it's a US bank) filled by people who previously worked at their offices in India that immigrated to Canada. Those job opportunities never made it to a public hiring process, they were filled by those Indian staff in completely internal process.
They opened this process with the office in Ireland because of the success with India and now there are several people brought over from the Emerald Isle too. Many open jobs are now not even publicly offered to Canadians; why bother when there's a pool of current employees from elsewhere in the world who and willing to pay to move and work here? I expect they hit at least 10% foreign hired and trained staff who have relocated to Canada office by next year. I wouldn't be shocked if it's 20% by 2025. It's no secret they earn moderately less than the Canadian hires because the bank has all the power in those salary negotiations, and many actually take a step down in their career to come over here, working a slightly lower level job because simply getting here was the important goal for them.
Out of curiosity, who still hasn't got COVID? I could say that until it ripped through our family over the last few weeks. First, my dad tested positive a few days after we were at their place for dinner. Then my wife and our baby got it, followed by my mom. The only one who somehow avoided testing positive was our eight year old. All of the cases were relatively mild and we finished our five day isolation.
I had it in February and stayed home for a week. I checked UT about 15 times a day that week.
Anyways, what are your thoughts on this? CBC article about ArriveCAN.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/business/arrivecan-american-tourists-niagara-falls-1.6568236
I certainly noticed that. A tricky part is the written side vs. the verbal side. I've recently seen many more people who can speak English at or near a perfect level, but when it comes to reading and writing it they are totally lost.English proficiency has been decreasing, which is problematic when your job requires you to participate in and understand technical discussions.
Looks like it will be rolled out now, to hopefully 80% of Africa by end of 2023. That could save millions.Meanwhile, breaking news...
WHO recommends groundbreaking malaria vaccine for children at risk
From link.
Historic RTS,S/AS01 recommendation can reinvigorate the fight against malaria