THURSDAY JULY 7, 2022 AUTOPRO OAKVILLE 2212 Wyecroft Road, Oakville 905-469-2442 info@autoprooakville.com 27 1995 - 2022 Insurance A better insurance experience starts here. Rob J Demille, Agent 515 Dundas St. W., Unit 203 Oakville, ON L6M 4M2 905-849-3050 rob@robdemille.ca LIMITEDTIME OFFER DON'T PAY FOR 6 MONTHS! CONDITIONS APPLY, OFFER ENDS JULY 31ST 2022, MUST REFERENCETHIS AD QUALITY •VALUE • SERVICE 1380 SPEERS ROAD, OAKVILLE 905-827-3200 It's a job seeker's market. "Not unlike the general labour market, there are lots of summer jobs available for students and in every industry. People can pretty much pick and choose," said Lily Lumsden, senior regional man- ager, YMCA Employment and Immigrant Services, YMCA of Hamilton, Burlington and Brant- ford. Statistics Canada data indi- cates that Halton youth aged 15-24 had an unemployment rate of 11.8 per cent during the first quarter of this year, a decrease over last year's 20.1 per cent unemploy- ment rate, according to John Da- vidson, director of economic de- velopment at Halton Region. Despite plenty of openings in retail, landscaping, factory work and hospitality -- in Oakville, and across the region -- a lack of willing recruits is actually creat- ing a labour shortage this sum- mer. The reasons are entirely dif- MANY SUMMER JOBS UNFILLED AS STUDENTS WEIGH OPTIONS KATHY YANCHUS kyanchus@metroland.com See MANY, page 2 Allyda King has launched her own online business, creating laser-engraved wooden maps for cottagers, instead of seeking a traditional summer job. Graham Paine/Metroland HOSTING AN EVENT? POST IT. PROMOTE IT. INSIDEHALTON.COM /EVENTS 3354 Timeless Drive 296 Fritillary Street Just ListedJust Listed