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Six Moose Jaw graduates receive provincial apprenticeship awards

The Saskatchewan Apprenticeship and Trade Certification Commission (SATCC) recently awarded Saskatchewan Youth Apprenticeship (SYA) Industry Scholarships to 110 graduating high school students from 77 communities across Saskatchewan. 

The Saskatchewan Apprenticeship and Trade Certification Commission (SATCC) recently awarded Saskatchewan Youth Apprenticeship (SYA) Industry Scholarships to 110 graduating high school students from 77 communities across Saskatchewan. 

Six of those students are from Moose Jaw:

  • Cole Hansen from A.E. Peacock received the South Country Equipment Scholarship; this student’s trade of interest is agricultural equipment technician
  • Quinn Dodd from A.E. Peacock received the Harold Molleken Scholarship; this student’s trade of interest is in welding
  • Terren Roszell received the K+S Potash Canada Scholarship; this student’s trade of interest is industrial mechanic (millwright)
  • Alexander Strauch from Central Collegiate received the Husky Apprenticeship Scholarship; this student’s trades of interest are industrial mechanic (millwright), machinist, or instrumentation and control technician
  • Darryl Manalo from Vanier Collegiate received the PCL construction Management Inc. Scholarship; this student’s trade of interest is welder, construction electrician, or industrial mechanic (millwright)
  • Joey Kakura received the PCL construction Management Inc. Scholarship; this student’s trade of interest is steamfitter-pipefitter

"Congratulations to this year's scholarship recipients who are on their way to long, successful, rewarding careers in our province," said MLA Jeremy Harrison, the former minister of immigration and career training.

"Providing opportunities for young people to enter the workforce, particularly in the skilled trades, is a key component of the Saskatchewan Labour Market Strategy and essential to the growth of Saskatchewan's strong economy,” he continued.

“Through continued investments into training and apprenticeship programs, our government is committed to ensuring more young people will pursue careers in the skilled trades in communities throughout Saskatchewan."

SYA Champions — the educators who oversee the SYA program in their schools — nominate students enrolled in the program who plan to pursue careers in the skilled trades. A selection committee of SATCC staff members chooses the winners based on students' responses in the nomination form.

Students outline how SYA has benefitted them, their current experiences with the skilled trades, and their education and career plans following graduation. 

Scholarships are redeemable for $1,000 each. Students can redeem them within two years of graduation by registering as an apprentice in Saskatchewan and completing level 1 technical training or by completing a recognized pre-employment program in a trade designated in Saskatchewan. 

Berkley Regier, one of the recipients, graduated from Maverick School in Swift Current this year and is now working in construction. 

"I love learning how to be better both physically and mentally, and working in the skilled trades brings new challenges every day and allows me to always learn new things," Regier said. "I am grateful for the opportunity that the SYA Industry Scholarship has given me because it will help me achieve my goal of pursuing an apprenticeship in the construction sector." 

To complete SYA, students work through 12 challenges — everything from interviewing a journeyperson to researching and writing a report on a designated trade to outlining the steps to journeyperson certification.

All students who complete SYA and register as apprentices in Saskatchewan within five years receive significant benefits: 300 trade hours, plus the waiver of their apprenticeship registration fee and Level 1 technical training tuition. 

"It is important we promote careers in the skilled trades as first-choice careers," said Jeff Ritter, CEO of the Saskatchewan Apprenticeship and Trade Certification Commission.

"The SYA program gives all participants who enter the apprenticeship system within five years tangible, valuable benefits and the SYA Industry Scholarship is one more incentive to help attract graduates into the skilled trades." 

The SYA Industry Scholarship program launched 15 years ago in 2009. Since then, more than 1,300 scholarships have been issued. Sixty industry sponsors, including employers, industry associations and unions, as well as the Government of Saskatchewan, have invested $1.2 million total into the SYA Industry Scholarship fund. 

There are currently more than 3,200 students registered in the SYA program across the province. 

For more information on the SYA program, click here

 

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