Ikea commits to hiring refugees in Edmonton - Action News
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Edmonton

Ikea commits to hiring refugees in Edmonton

Ikea Edmonton has partnered up with the Edmonton Mennonite Centre for Newcomers to recruit refugees to work in its store.

Company will recruit staff through partnership with local agency for newcomers

IKEA employees celebrate the opening of a store in Quebec City. The store was part of a pilot project that focused on hiring refugees. (IKEA Canada)

IkeaEdmonton has partnered up with the Edmonton Mennonite Centre for Newcomers to recruit and hire refugees to work in its store.

The initiative is part of a national program launched by Ikea Canada, which aims to hire 250 refugees over three years.

The program will provide valuable work experience forrefugees in Edmonton, said Laurie Hauer, manager of employment programs with the Edmonton Mennonite Centre for Newcomers (EMCN).

Beyond providing an income, having a job also helps refugees feel connected to a community, Hauer said.

"It's about knowing that you're contributing to something greater and bigger," she said. "It's about the relationships that you make."

Jobs are available in all departments, including food service,sales and IT.

The company will benefitfrom having a more diverse workforce, said IkeaCanada's head of sustainability, Brendan Seale.

"By removing barriers for these newcomers to Canada, it really allows us to access a broader pool of talent," Seale said.

"We also know that when we have a more diverse and inclusive workforce, we have different points of view. It helps us to avoid the groupthink and bring in new perspectives."

IkeaCanada wants to complement the supports that local agencies are already offering to refugees, Seale added.

"It's really to take a holistic look at the experience of a newcomer to the community," he said. "Employment, of course, is an important part of that."

IkeaEdmonton andEMCNare beginning the hiring process next week.

The EMCN will help with the recruitment aspect, striving to match refugees with work that will make use of their skills.

"It's a new way of understanding and hiring a workforce," Hauer said. "Really looking at people and how they contribute, and where their growth is."

"It's an amazing trend that should be happening across the labour market."