TORONTO — Tania-Joy Bartlett, a Master Electrician and former contracting business owner, is highlighting safety and respect as practical solutions to Canada's growing shortage of tradespeople. Drawing on decades of experience, Bartlett contends that workplace culture, not just technical training, will determine whether younger workers enter and remain in skilled professions like construction and electrical work.
According to data from the Construction Industry Training Board (CITB), the industry will require over 225,000 additional workers by 2027. Bartlett notes that younger workers are more likely to leave roles where they feel unsafe or disrespected. "People don't walk away from the work itself," she says. "They walk away from how they're treated while doing it."
Bartlett explains that safety and respect are daily practices that directly affect productivity and retention. She recalls worksites where implementing simple changes, such as daily check-ins and clear communication, reduced mistakes and tension within days. "I've seen crews go from scattered to focused just because they finally felt comfortable speaking up," she says. "When people feel respected, they stop hiding problems."
Research supports this perspective. The Health and Safety Executive reports that poor workplace culture contributes to higher accident rates, with construction accounting for one of the highest proportions of fatal injuries. Studies also indicate that respectful workplaces report hazards earlier, which helps reduce serious incidents.
For dense urban worksites operating under constant pressure from tight schedules and public scrutiny, Bartlett argues that leadership is most visible when standards are tested. "When pressure goes up, that's when culture shows," she notes. "You either protect people, or you push them until something breaks." She believes improving worksite culture is one of the fastest ways to stabilize the workforce and attract new talent.
Rather than advocating for sweeping policy changes, Bartlett encourages individual action. She suggests supervisors can model calm communication, workers can speak up early about hazards, employers can remove toxic behavior immediately, and mentors can guide rather than intimidate. Parents and educators, she adds, can help by presenting trades as skilled and respected careers. "You don't need a new rulebook," Bartlett concludes. "You need people willing to treat each other properly every day."

