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14,434 Persons Benefited from Overseas Employment Programme in 2024

By: , January 4, 2025
14,434 Persons Benefited from Overseas Employment Programme in 2024
Photo: Donald De La Haye
Acting Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Labour and Social Security, Dione Jennings, addresses the send-off ceremony for 96 farm workers who departed Jamaica for Canada under the Seasonal Agricultural Workers Programme (SAWP). The ceremony was held on Friday (Jan. 3) at the Ministry’s Overseas Employment Centre in Kingston.
14,434 Persons Benefited from Overseas Employment Programme in 2024
Photo: Donald De La Haye
State Minister in the Ministry of Labour and Social Security, Dr. the Hon. Norman Dunn, addresses the send-off ceremony for 96 farm workers to Canada under the Seasonal Agricultural Workers Programme (SAWP), at the Ministry’s Overseas Employment Centre in Kingston on Friday (Jan. 3). Listening (from left) are Minister, Hon. Pearnel Charles Jr. and Acting Permanent Secretary, Dione Jennings.

The Full Story

A total of 14,434 Jamaicans were placed in jobs abroad last year under the Ministry of Labour and Social Security’s Overseas Employment Programme.

Acting Permanent Secretary in the Ministry, Dione Jennings, in making the disclosure, said that of the total, 8255 workers or 57 per cent travelled to Canada under the Seasonal Agricultural Workers Programme (SAWP).

She was speaking at a send-off ceremony for 96 workers to the North American country at the Ministry’s Overseas Employment Centre in Kingston on Friday (Jan. 3).

She charged the workers, who departed for Canada, to be good ambassadors for Jamaica.

“The only burden you bear in participating in this programme is to ensure that you represent us well,” she said.

For his part, State Minister, Dr. the Hon. Norman Dunn, highlighted that the programme is an opportunity for the workers to realize their dreams and aspirations and to create a better quality of life for themselves and their families.

He encouraged them to perform their duties with diligence and determination, pay keen attention to the requirements of their contracts and conduct themselves in an appropriate manner at all times.

“First timers, you have the legacy to carry on. You have to continue to fly the name of Jamaican workers high, because the Jamaican worker is known to be hard working, disciplined, dedicated, committed to his task and self-motivated. These qualities are not lost on the Canadian employer and so they continue to participate in this programme, requesting persons to return year after year,” Dr. Dunn said.

For nearly six decades, Jamaica and Canada have maintained a beneficial partnership through the SAWP.

The collaboration drives agricultural productivity in Canada while creating valuable employment opportunities for Jamaicans.

Last Updated: January 6, 2025