Posted on Wednesday, October 17, 2012 @ 10:19 AM by Harbinger with a score of 0
Instead of an influx of Chinese miners maybe the premier can settle for fewer Chinese and management. Hire local people. Apparently the media ads for miners included the phrase “speaking Mandarin”. If that is the case maybe the local miners can just learn a few valuable phrases in Mandarin instead. Like the words,”lunch time”, “duck”,”cover your face” “Let’s get out of here”, “don’t forget your helmet”. “This way out”. “Run faster”. That would cover most anything needed.
Posted on Wednesday, October 17, 2012 @ 10:30 AM by Dragonmaster with a score of 0
Take a tour through Tumbler Ridge. Lots of Chinese there already. Has been for a long time.
Posted on Wednesday, October 17, 2012 @ 10:34 AM by steph99 with a score of 0
Saw the ads they ran, $21.00 hour must have grade 12, speak Chinese an asset to employment, it wa fixed fom the start.And if thse workers are really temp, were is the training for Canadian miners? so much bull
Posted on Wednesday, October 17, 2012 @ 4:38 PM by Sivil with a score of 0
Interesting when Dehua is only currently in process for one Environmental Assessment. The other three have not yet been applied for. And it is just the beginning of the process. No permit no mine operations. So, what will the workers be doing???
Posted on Wednesday, October 17, 2012 @ 4:38 PM by Sivil with a score of 0
Interesting when Dehua is only currently in process for one Environmental Assessment. The other three have not yet been applied for. And it is just the beginning of the process. No permit no mine operations. So, what will the workers be doing???
Posted on Wednesday, October 17, 2012 @ 9:30 PM by my2bits with a score of 0
There’s already Chinese workers in two gold mines north of Dease Lake. I wonder if they’re being paid less than minimum, and how anyone would ever be able to find out for sure.
Posted on Thursday, October 18, 2012 @ 12:10 PM by pgthoughts with a score of 0
Interesting that BC has 15% of the Canadian population and 50% of the temporary workers from outside Canada. Could it be that the governments in other provinces want to see their own citizens working rather than just supplying cheap labour for cozy corporate donors?
Comments
Instead of an influx of Chinese miners maybe the premier can settle for fewer Chinese and management. Hire local people. Apparently the media ads for miners included the phrase “speaking Mandarin”. If that is the case maybe the local miners can just learn a few valuable phrases in Mandarin instead. Like the words,”lunch time”, “duck”,”cover your face” “Let’s get out of here”, “don’t forget your helmet”. “This way out”. “Run faster”. That would cover most anything needed.
Take a tour through Tumbler Ridge. Lots of Chinese there already. Has been for a long time.
Saw the ads they ran, $21.00 hour must have grade 12, speak Chinese an asset to employment, it wa fixed fom the start.And if thse workers are really temp, were is the training for Canadian miners? so much bull
Interesting when Dehua is only currently in process for one Environmental Assessment. The other three have not yet been applied for. And it is just the beginning of the process. No permit no mine operations. So, what will the workers be doing???
Interesting when Dehua is only currently in process for one Environmental Assessment. The other three have not yet been applied for. And it is just the beginning of the process. No permit no mine operations. So, what will the workers be doing???
There’s already Chinese workers in two gold mines north of Dease Lake. I wonder if they’re being paid less than minimum, and how anyone would ever be able to find out for sure.
Interesting that BC has 15% of the Canadian population and 50% of the temporary workers from outside Canada. Could it be that the governments in other provinces want to see their own citizens working rather than just supplying cheap labour for cozy corporate donors?
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