Youth Employment and Skills Program (Canada) - fundsforNGOs
The Youth Employment and Skills Program (YESP) will contribute approximately $13.5 million to projects that employ youth and youth facing barriers.
The Youth Employment and Skills Program (YESP) will contribute approximately $13.5 million to projects that employ youth and youth facing barriers.
Canada Summer Jobs (CSJ) helps youth develop and improve their skills through quality summer jobs. CSJ provides wage subsidies to employers,
The Canada Student Financial Assistance Program (CSFA Program) provides Canada Student Grants and Loans to help students pay for their post-secondary education. The Canada Student Financial Assistance Program. Through the CSFA Program, the Government of Canada funds about 60% of a full-time student's financial need. The Canada Summer Jobs program (CSJ) provides youth (aged 15 to 30) with opportunities to develop and improve their skills through quality jobs over the summer with employers from not-for-profit organizations and the public sector, as well as private sector organizations with 50 or fewer full-time employees. ESDC's YESS Program, which is part of the overarching YESS provides funding to organizations to deliver a range of activities that help youth overcome barriers to employment. The Youth Employment and Skills Program (YESP), provides financial incentives to agricultural employers to create jobs for youth that provide an opportunity for these youth to gain valuable work experience and skill development opportunities, while also raising awareness of opportunities in the agriculture sector.
The Canada Summer Jobs program (CSJ) provides youth (aged 15 to 30) with opportunities to develop and improve their skills through quality jobs over the summer with employers from not-for-profit organizations and the public sector, as well as private sector organizations with 50 or fewer full-time employees. Funded by the Government of Canada’s Future Skills Program, the Future Skills Centre invests in programs that support youth facing barriers, including NEET (Not in Education, Employment, or Training) youth, through mentorship, career exploration, and work-integrated learning. Together, these partners deliver funding programs to provide youth in Canada aged 15 to 30, especially those facing barriers to employment, with opportunities to receive employment supports, gain work experience and develop the skills needed to find and keep quality jobs.In addition to ESDC’s CSJ and the YESS Program the following programs and are also part of the YESS.
The YESS provides funding to organizations to deliver a range of activities that help youth (aged 15 to 30) overcome barriers to employment. The YESS Program
Programs include the Canada Job Grant, which provides funding for employee training, and provincial initiatives like Ontario's Second Career
The program provides non-repayable contributions to support a youth's wages and benefits paid by an employer during a project, to a maximum of $14000.
The government says it will also allocate $307.9 million over two years to a Youth Employment and Skills Strategy. The funding goes toward jobs