logo
Ontario and Atlantic provinces rank lowest in Canada for worker happiness

Ontario and Atlantic provinces rank lowest in Canada for worker happiness

Global Newsa day ago
A new report is shedding light on workplace happiness and workers in Ontario and Atlantic Canada are at the bottom of the list.
ADP Canada's Happiness at Work Index report for June found that Ontario has now fallen to the bottom of the national rankings in workplace happiness, with a regional score of just 6.7 out of 10.
Ontario is tied with workers in Atlantic Canada.
The report says the drop in happiness for Ontario workers is a warning sign.
'From stalled career growth to lackluster recognition, Ontario workers are sounding the alarm on what's not working at work,' the report says.
Given the boost other provinces are seeing, the report warns that Ontario's continued slide suggests deeper issues are at play.
Story continues below advertisement
Key factors outlined in the report include that just over half of Ontario workers feel like they are stuck in their current position with nowhere to grow.
Get breaking National news
For news impacting Canada and around the world, sign up for breaking news alerts delivered directly to you when they happen. Sign up for breaking National newsletter Sign Up
By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy
The report also found that the province lags behind regions offering better flexibility and balance and that workers in Ontario feel overlooked and underappreciated.
This comes as other provinces are seeing a summer boost in employee sentiment thanks to perks like flexible hours and time to disconnect.
'Workers in Canada are clear – supporting workplace relationships or offering meaningful summer perks, supports well-being at work,' says Heather Haslam, vice-president of marketing at ADP Canada. 'If employers align to some of these priorities, they can support environments where people feel valued and heard – ultimately encouraging a stronger employee experience.'
A lack of flexibility and balance from workplaces could also be contributing to worker burnout.
A 2024 report from HR consulting firm Robert Half found that more than four in 10 (42 per cent) of Canadian professionals reported feeling burnt out.
Millennials (ages 27 to 42) reported burnout at work more than any other generation, at 55 per cent. Generation Z (ages 18 to 26) followed closely at 51 per cent, then generation X (ages 43 to 58) at 32 per cent and baby boomers (ages 59 and above) at 24 per cent.
Story continues below advertisement
The most reported contribution to burnout among respondents was heavy workloads due to understaffed teams, at 52 per cent. Forty-two per cent felt a lack of communication and managerial support contributed most to their burnout, while 39 per cent pinned it on missing tools/resources required to perform properly at work.
— with files from Global News' Naomi Barghiel
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Ontario architect's seal forged by remote worker believed to be North Korean fraudster
Ontario architect's seal forged by remote worker believed to be North Korean fraudster

CBC

time26 minutes ago

  • CBC

Ontario architect's seal forged by remote worker believed to be North Korean fraudster

An imposter, believed to be North Korean, forged the official seal of an Ontario architect, an investigation by The Fifth Estate has found. The Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) has in recent years engaged thousands of remote workers whose purpose is to generate revenue for the regime, according to an international advisory issued by the U.S. government. Their exploits have been detailed in indictments from the U.S. Department of Justice and reporting from around the world. While they are best-known for high-value cryptocurrency hacks, these workers will also take real jobs at real companies under false identities. According to an FBI bulletin from January, this employment sometimes ends with the worker stealing proprietary information or holding data and code hostage for ransom. "The threat posed by DPRK operatives is both real and immediate," U.S. Attorney Leah B. Foley said in an announcement on June 30. "Thousands of North Korean cyber operatives have been trained and deployed by the regime to blend into the global digital workforce." They also masquerade as licensed professionals on freelance websites offering to do things like reviewing and approving engineering or architectural plans with forged stamps. According to the Association of Architects of Ontario, an architect's stamp — otherwise known as a seal — is "a representation to the public" that the professional is taking responsibility for the document and that it was prepared by them or under their supervision and direction. In Ontario, seals are issued by self-regulated bodies created and governed by specific legislation. For instance, Professional Engineers Ontario operates under the authority of the Professional Engineers Act. In mid-May, a pseudonymous online researcher known only as Cookie Connoisseur posted a series of professional stamps on X bearing the names of engineers across the United States. Cookie Connoisseur claimed they were being used by North Korean remote workers. Among them was the professional seal of Canadian architect Stephen Mauro, who is based in the Greater Toronto Area. His stamp appeared on a blueprint for a "boutique studio" designed by a company called Global Creative Consultant Engineers (GCCE). Speaking with The Fifth Estate, Mauro stated he had never heard of GCCE, had never seen the drawing before and did not stamp it. He also pointed out that the signature on the seal did not resemble his, and that the stamp itself contained minor differences from his official seal. "The biggest thing is to find out where these are being submitted in Ontario," Mauro said, "to notify the municipalities that it's not an actual architect submitting these." Remote freelance work Searching online, The Fifth Estate was able to locate a Facebook page for GCCE, which included an email address and phone number for a man named Faisal Hussain. When contacted by CBC, Hussain said he was based in Pakistan and confirmed the drawings were his. When asked about his relationship with Mauro, Hussain initially stated "he is working with me as teammate." In a subsequent video call, Hussain said he had hired Mauro via an online freelancing platform and had never seen his face or heard his voice. "He's been working with me for two years and I didn't get any issue from the city," Hussain said. He did not respond to questions about which city he was referring to. According to a 2022 U.S. government advisory on North Korean IT workers, they "most commonly obtain freelance jobs through various online platforms." The sentiment is echoed by cybersecurity expert Michael Barnhart, who works for the risk management firm DTEX Systems. "Whatever the popular thing in the host nation is what they're going for," Barnhart said, adding that he's seen logs of conversations where North Korean remote workers are asking an AI platform for lists of popular freelance websites in Canada and Japan. Are the documents real? In an attempt to highlight North Korean remote workers' activities, Cookie Connoisseur, as well as a number of other accounts, regularly post files — videos, photos, chat logs — that they claim originate from North Korean actors. Asked if they would be interviewed for this story, Cookie Connoisseur referred The Fifth Estate to Barnhart, the cybersecurity expert. He said he acts as the public face of this loose collective of online researchers. The U.S.-based Barnhart, who formerly led North Korea threat-hunting operations for a Google subsidiary called Mandiant, told The Fifth Estate that the members of the collective work regular jobs and do this research in their spare time. Barnhart would not disclose how the collective obtained the blueprint bearing the Ontario architect Mauro's seal. In an email to CBC, he said the information had been corroborated by multiple researchers in the industry who had been tracking this particular North Korean "operator." He also noted that North Korean operatives read news articles about their work, and that as a result, providing too much information could divulge the researcher's methods. Alongside freelancing websites, North Korean remote workers also engage in what Barnhart called "spray-and-pray" job applications for positions at companies hiring remote workers. They apply for hundreds of jobs a day, and hope that with such a high volume, they will get at least some responses.

Porter Airlines pilots are set to join union within weeks
Porter Airlines pilots are set to join union within weeks

Global News

timean hour ago

  • Global News

Porter Airlines pilots are set to join union within weeks

Pilots at Porter Airlines are poised to become members of Canada's largest union of airline pilots, the union said in a statement Friday. On Thursday, pilots from the airline filed membership cards with the Canada Industrial Relations Board (CIRB) to become members of the Air Line Pilots Association (ALPA). If certified, they are expected to become members of the union within the next three to four weeks, the statement said. 'Welcoming the Porter pilots into ALPA will further advance the interests of commercial airline pilots and strengthen aviation safety and security,' ALPA president Jason Ambrosi said. Get breaking National news For news impacting Canada and around the world, sign up for breaking news alerts delivered directly to you when they happen. Sign up for breaking National newsletter Sign Up By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy ALPA currently represents 79,000 pilots, or 95 per cent of all pilots in Canada. If they become members of ALPA, Porter Airlines pilots will join pilots from 21 pilot groups, including from Air Canada, PAL Airlines, Air Borealis, Perimeter Aviation, Morningstar Air Express, PAL Aerospace, Cargojet and Flair. Story continues below advertisement According to ALPA, Porter Airlines has the fourth-largest group of pilots of any airline in Canada and is the largest non-unionized carrier in the country. Porter is in the midst of a push to keep growing and challenge airlines like Air Canada and WestJet, adding new routes and offering what CEO Michael Deluce last year described to Global News as 'elevated economy' to consumers.

Finance minister says Canada can negotiate better tariff terms with U.S. than other countries
Finance minister says Canada can negotiate better tariff terms with U.S. than other countries

Vancouver Sun

timean hour ago

  • Vancouver Sun

Finance minister says Canada can negotiate better tariff terms with U.S. than other countries

Canada's finance minister said the country can negotiate a better trade deal with the Trump administration than other nations have received, pushing back on the idea that it may have to settle for a new baseline tariff on all exports to the U.S. 'We buy more from the U.S. than China, Japan, the U.K. and France combined, so we're not in the same league as others,' Francois-Philippe Champagne said in an interview. 'The competitiveness of North America depends on what happens between Canada and United States,' he said, pointing to Canada's wealth of critical minerals and energy, the integrated supply chains across the border and its status as the largest supplier of aluminum to the U.S. Start your day with a roundup of B.C.-focused news and opinion. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. A welcome email is on its way. If you don't see it, please check your junk folder. The next issue of Sunrise will soon be in your inbox. Please try again Interested in more newsletters? Browse here. Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney and U.S. President Donald Trump have agreed to try to hammer out a deal by July 21 to govern the two countries' trade relationship, which saw them exchange more than $900 billion in goods and services last year. The U.S. had a trade deficit of $36 billion with Canada in 2024, according to U.S. government data, mostly because it guzzles millions of barrels a day of Canadian oil and fuels. Excluding energy, the US had a trade surplus with its northern neighbor. The U.S., Canada and Mexico have an existing trade pact that Trump signed during his first term. But the president paid little heed to it as he placed import taxes of 50% on foreign steel and aluminum, along with levies on cars and trucks. 'The endgame for us is to have the best possible deal for Canadian workers and the Canadian industry,' Champagne said. 'We have, compared to many countries that are negotiating with the United States, already a trade agreement in place.' The UK agreed to a framework that allows manufacturers to export as many as 100,000 vehicles a year to the US at a 10% tariff rate, but a higher tax remains on British steel. Under an agreement with Vietnam, the US will slap a 20% tariff on imports from the Asian country, Trump said this week. Meanwhile, the European Union is willing to accept a trade arrangement with the US that includes a 10% tariff on many of its exports, people familiar with the matter told Bloomberg News recently. Still, Carney and other Canadian officials have said their position is that all new US tariffs should be lifted as part of any deal. Champagne announced Sunday that Canada has scrapped its 3% digital services tax on technology companies — just hours before the first payments were due. The move came after Trump terminated trade discussions with Canada based on what he called an 'egregious' tax, which would have earned the Canadian government more than C$7 billion ($5.2 billion) over five years, according to an earlier estimate from the country's Parliamentary budget officer. 'The digital services tax was always part of a number of things that were to be discussed,' Champagne said. He also rejected the idea that it could be reintroduced at a later date. 'We canceled it,' he said. 'The OECD and other countries will probably continue their discussions around that. But for us, we took a strategic decision because we want to get to a comprehensive agreement with the United States on security and on the economic front.' Champagne insisted that Canada's dairy and poultry supply management system isn't up for negotiation, despite the fact that Trump has said he doesn't like it. 'This is off the table,' he said. That system, which controls the production of food commodities including milk, eggs and chicken, includes steep tariffs — but they're only imposed when imports exceed a certain level. Almost all current US dairy exports to Canada enter the country duty-free. The US negotiated higher quotas for shipping agricultural products to Canada during Trump's first term in office. Budget Shortfall Carney's Liberal government has made a policy shift since the April election, promising to accelerate increases in defense spending — but at a cost to Canada's financial position. The C.D. Howe Institute, a Canadian think tank, estimates that Canada's budget deficit may reach about C$92 billion this fiscal year, more than double the government's December projection. Champagne declined to comment on the possible size of the deficit, or how the government would increase revenues or reduce expenses to reduce the shortfall. 'Canadians understand we're in a unique position both domestically and internationally with the discussions around tariff, the discussion we had around defense and our sovereignty, and at the same time unlocking our full economic potential,' he said. 'It's kind of a generational opportunity.' (Adds details about federal deficit projections in the final four paragraphs.) Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark and sign up for our politics newsletter, First Reading, here .

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store