Home | WebMail | Register or Login

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

Saskatchewan

Sask. students feeling summer employment crunch due to COVID-19

Post-secondary students are nearly finished with their winter semester. For many of them, that means it's time to start searching for summer employment.

University of Regina's depleted emergency fund calls for donations while students search for jobs

A large sign with the words University of Regina.
(CBC)

Post-secondary students are nearly finished with their winter semester. For many, that means it's time to start searching for summer employment.

That task is one of manycommonplace activities that have been drastically impacted bytothe COVID-19 pandemic.

"The search has been pretty difficult," said third-year University of Regina political studies majorKatarina Ewert. "If you go on like, [job search website] Indeed, there are so many people hiring in Regina for waitressing jobs, but now all that's been shut down. So that was my plan, but it's not doable at the moment."

Ewert saidshe's been able to secure provincial government employment in the past as a summer student. She has applied this year, too, but she's not sure there will be as many seasonal jobs available.

"They're usually around $17 per hourto start with, so you can make all your money during the summer and live on that for the rest of the year," she said.

Some students may not qualifyfor pandemic benefits

Ewert knows she's not alone in her struggle.

"All over Canada you can go on social media and see people in the same situation, not knowing if they're going to be hired, if they qualify for EI, because they probably wouldn't if they hadn't worked, if you even qualify for the emergency response benefit," she said, citing minimumincome amounts to qualify for federal help. "If you haven't been working, you can't qualify."
Katarina Ewert is a third-year Polical Science major at University of Regina, and she's concerned about her summer job prospects amid the COVID-19 pandemic. (submitted by Katarina Ewert)

She saidthat while it's nice to see governments deferring payments for student loans, that's not helpful for people like her who are still in the midst of their studies.

University of Regina calls for donations to emergency fund

Meanwhile, the University of Regina is calling for donations to its emergency fund, which awards bursaries to students for housing, food security, technology, medical care, necessary travelor unforseen circumstances. The school also offers emergency loans, but in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic it's highlighting the bursary program.

The university's interim president and vice chancellor, Thomas Chase, saidthe bursary fundnormally awards $90,000 to students annually. Right now, it's seeing three times the amount of daily applications it normally sees.

"So it's a tough time. All available funds to date have beendepleted. We're relying on the generosity of our communities both inside the university faculty and staff and outside, to help our students in this time of need," he said.
Thomas Chase is the Interim President and Vice-Chancellor at University of Regina. (CBC)

Chase saidthe fund is dealing with the added difficulty of being unable to host its usual fundraiser events due to restrictions around the pandemic, so it's asking people to donate online at urgiving.ca/emergency.

Manyinternships maintained

Chase saidthe university knows its students are facing hardship around summer employment.

"There's no question. One group that we would think of immediately is people who work in restaurants, many of whom are students," Chase said. "That's a terrific blow, and that's just one group."

He saidmany of the school's partners in co-op work experience programs and internships 'have maintained what they've been able to do,'but that there are exceptionssuch as education student-interns, who will not be able to work in a classroom while the province's classes are out indefinitely.

"It's kind of happening on a case-by-case and employer-by-employer basis," he said.