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Guelph entrepreneur program for women gets funding boost

The province wants to put financial power back in the hands of women by making it easier to get into the skilled trades and become entrepreneurs
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Charmaine Williams, associate minister of women’s social and economic opportunity speaks to the crowd at Conestoga College on Wednesday morning.

CAMBRIDGE – Training programs in Cambridge and Guelph will get a combined $1.88 million boost from the provincial government over the next three years to empower low-income and abused women while tapping into an underutilized skilled trades workforce.

Charmaine Williams, the province's associate minister of women’s social and economic opportunity was at Conestoga College's skilled trades campus in Cambridge on Wednesday to make the announcement and said the investment through the Women’s Economic Security Program will support two employment training programs for low-income women.

It will also help women become more financially independent and escape potentially abusive relationships, she said. 

"Affordability and making sure women are financially independent is so important, because when women are financially independent they are safer and that's why it is imperative that we create persistent opportunities for women to enter into any sector that they want to get into," said Williams. 

The minister said escaping abusive relationships is made more challenging for women who are being controlled financially.

The goal of the training programs is to give some financial power back to women and allow them to make their own decisions to become independent. 

The investment will provide up to $1,061,000 to support the Conestoga College Institute of Technology’s carpentry pre-apprenticeship training program for women in Cambridge and up to $821,000 for 10 Carden Shared Space’s Opening Opportunities entrepreneurship training program for women in Guelph.

According to Suzanne Moyer, dean of the School of Trades & Apprenticeship, said the funding will support 24 spaces a year at the college for women who are looking at getting into the trades. 

Moyer noted the province has planned to build 1.5 million homes by 2031 and invest over $185 million in infrastructure projects. Getting women into the skilled trades workforce will help meet those ambitious goals, she said. 


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Joe McGinty

About the Author: Joe McGinty

Joe McGinty is a multimedia journalist who covers local news in the Cambridge area. He is a graduate of Conestoga College and began his career as a freelance journalist at CambridgeToday before joining full time.
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