Weekly Summary
Jul 7 – Jul 13, 2025
Rogers Communications ended its contract with external customer-service firm Foundever, resulting in approximately 900 job losses across Canada as the telecom company shifts to AI-powered chat support. The layoffs affect a mix of short and long-serving staff who were previously outsourced to Foundever for customer service roles.
Conestoga College is laying off at least 190 staff and suspending 82 programs due to a 48% drop in international student enrollment caused by the federal international study permit cap. This is part of a broader crisis affecting Ontario's 24 public colleges, with over 10,000 faculty and staff being laid off or projected to lose their jobs across the province.
The Vancouver Art Gallery is cutting approximately 30% of its staff (34 employees) and reducing programming by 30% to balance its budget. The reductions include 16 voluntary departures and 18 layoffs, with additional job losses possible through a union seniority process affecting all departments.
The Township of Fauquier-Strickland in Northern Ontario announced it will cease all municipal services and lay off five township employees as of August 1, 2025, due to a $2.5-million operating deficit. The municipality of 467 people exhausted its cash reserves and faced the choice between shutting down services or implementing a 190-230 percent property tax increase on residents.
The Nova Scotia Community College is laying off 27 food service workers across its campuses as it outsources operations to private company Aramark Canada. The college cited unsustainable annual losses of approximately $800,000 in its in-house food services operations.
Paccar, a truck manufacturer operating a plant in Sainte-Thérèse, Quebec, is laying off at least 175 workers effective August 4, 2025. The layoffs are attributed to decreased demand for trucks due to economic uncertainty from U.S. tariffs and follow 250 job losses in December 2024.
Amazon closed its seven warehouses and delivery services in Quebec in January 2025 as part of a cost-saving decision. According to the Confédération des syndicats nationaux, 4,500 affected workers still lack jobs, proper severance, or government assistance.
The City of Windsor eliminated 38 seasonal and part-time caretaker positions at arenas and community centres due to a failed agreement on job protection with CUPE Local 82. The union had negotiated for 19 months seeking a memorandum of understanding to prevent elimination of full-time positions while seasonal employees remain employed.