Remsoft CEO Takes Over As New Brunswick Business Council Chair
The New Brunswick Business Council has named Andrea Feunekes as its new chair.
The New Brunswick Business Council has named Andrea Feunekes as its new chair.
Climate change is a real and meaningful threat to our economy, planet, and collective future. New Brunswick, and every other province, state, and nation around the world, must take immediate climate action to limit the damage we are doing to our planet.
The Saint John company that offers services and a software platform to helpĀ companies support diversity and inclusion initiatives has hired Adrienne O’Pray, the former CEO of the New Brunswick Business Council.
Alex LeBlanc succeeds Adrienne O’Pray, who served in the role for over six years.
Business leaders say the province’s new strategy will provide better opportunities for local businesses to compete and grow, and help the government deliver better public services.
New Brunswick Business Council CEO Adrienne O’Pray says the growth needs to continue if the province is to fill the 120,000 jobs expected to be vacant in the next decade due to retirements.
New Brunswick needs to change its mindset as it faces demographic pressures, as well as the changing nature of work and technology globally, panellists at a Moncton event hosted by Statistics Canada say.
The province could soon have its own hub if Green Economy Canada’s plan to expand its network of local hubs outside of Ontario for the first time succeeds.
On the year of the 50th anniversary of the Official Languages Act, the New Brunswick Business Council (NBBC) and Conseil Ć©conomique du Nouveau-Brunswick (CENB) are leading the creation of a working group that aims to increase the economic benefits that come from bilingualism in the province.
Under FutureReadyNB, undergraduate students at the four publicly funded universities can get funding for paid experiential learning stints with New Brunswick employers.