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Thursday, October 30, 2003

Impact of the Ontario-US power outage on hours worked

August 14 to 31, 2003

An estimated 2.4 million workers in Ontario and Gatineau, Quebec, lost 26.4 million hours of work time in the second half of August because of the Ontario-US power outage and subsequent conservation period. This amounted to over one in three workers. At the same time, an estimated 713,000 people, or 11.0% of workers, put in a total of 7.5 million overtime hours. The net effect was a loss of 18.9 million hours.

There was a net loss in all industries except utilities, farm and municipal government. Workers in these three industries saw their hours rise as a result of the outage. In some industries, the net loss was very large.

A total of 3.6 million of the 18.9 million hours lost were at the federal or provincial level. About 6 in 10 federal and over 4 in 10 provincial government workers lost work hours in the second half of August because of the outage or conservation period. While some also worked overtime, the net effect was a loss of 16 hours per federal employee and 12 hours per provincial worker.

A significant share of factory workers also lost time in August. One-half of all people working in manufacturing were absent because of the blackout. Helping offset this, power outage-related overtime was relatively common in manufacturing, with 17.1% of workers putting in extra hours, but the net loss of hours was still 3.7 million hours.

In utilities, 122,000 hours were added to workers schedules as a result of the power outage. While 17.2% of utilities workers lost some work time, 18.9% worked some overtime. Furthermore, the overtime was long for utilities workers. The average overtime worker in utilities put in 19.4 hours in the second half of August, more than any other industry.

Overtime was also common in municipal government, where 16.6% of workers put in long hours because of the outage, second only to utilities. Included in municipal government are many essential services such as police, fire and ambulance.

The only other industry with a positive net effect on hours was agriculture. Only 4.9% of people employed in farming lost work time, whereas 13.1% worked longer hours because of the blackout.

Note: Data for this release were derived from questions added to September's Labour Force Survey (LFS). Special questions were required to estimate the impact on hours worked of the power outage that started on August 14 and subsequent conservation period during the following week. The LFS normally only measures hours worked during one week of the month, the survey reference week. In August, the reference week was the week of the 10th to the 16th. Since the impact of the power outage extended beyond that week, the additional questions were asked in September. In reference to the second half of August, four questions were asked of a sample of September LFS respondents in Ontario and Gatineau, Quebec., from which a large number of people commute to the Ottawa region to work. Together, these questions determine, as result of the power outage and conservation, how many people lost work time, and how many hours they lost, the number of people who worked overtime and the amount of overtime they put in. The impact on hours worked allows for some measurement of the overall economic impact of the Ontario-US power outage.

For general information or to order data, contact Client Services (1-866-873-8788; 613-951-4090; fax: 613-951-2869; labour@statcan.gc.ca). To enquire about the concepts, methods or data quality of this release, contact Geoff Bowlby (613-951-3325; geoff.bowlby@statcan.gc.ca).

Total number of people who lost work as a result of the Ontario-US power outage, rate of absenteeism, and associated hours lost, by industry1, Ontario and Gatineau Quebec, last half of August, 2003 
  Number of people absent because of power outage Rate of absenteeism (absent workers as a share of total employed) Total hours lost Hours lost per absent employee
  '000 % '000   
Total 2,381.4 36.8 26,377.3 11.1
Goods-producing sector 725.8 41.8 7,408.8 10.2
  Agriculture
4.6 4.9 35.6 7.7
  Forestry, fishing, mining, oil and gas
4.6 13.8 43.9 9.5
  Utilities
10.0 17.2 91.7 9.2
  Construction
133.3 32.0 1,476.5 11.1
  Manufacturing
573.2 50.6 5,761.0 10.1
Services-producing sector 1,645.4 34.7 18,875.9 11.5
  Trade
336.9 35.2 3,047.3 9.0
  Transportation and warehousing
70.1 24.9 858.5 12.2
  Finance, insurance, real estate and leasing
202.7 45.5 1,943.2 9.6
  Professional, scientific and technical services
197.4 44.2 1,914.8 9.7
  Management of companies and administrative and other support services
112.3 40.9 1,167.0 10.4
  Educational services
71.2 21.0 713.6 10.0
  Health care and social assistance
135.0 21.3 1,184.3 8.8
  Information, culture and recreation
123.9 36.8 1,504.3 12.1
  Accommodation and food services
135.9 34.7 1,336.6 9.8
  Other services
94.8 34.7 897.2 9.5
  Public administration
165.0 46.0 4,309.2 26.1
    Federal
102.4 60.4 2,889.3 28.2
    Provincial
34.5 44.7 1,090.8 31.6
    Municipal and other
28.0 25.1 329.2 11.8
1 Survey conducted in September and industry information comes from person's job in September. Because some people had no industry information in September but lost/gained work in August, the sum of all industries does not add to the total.

Total number of people who worked overtime as a result of the Ontario-US power outage, rate of overtime, associated hours gained, and net effect on hours, by industry1, Ontario and Gatineau Quebec, last half of August, 2003 
  Number of people who worked overtime because of power outage Rate of overtime (overtimers as a share of total employed) Total hours gained Hours gained per overtime worker Net effect of power outage (hours lost minus hours gained)
  '000  % '000   '000 
Total 712.5 11.0 7,522.5 10.6 -18,854.8
Goods-producing sector 255.2 14.7 2,876.6 11.3 -4,532.2
  Agriculture
12.3 13.1 134.5 10.9 98.9
  Forestry, fishing, mining, oil and gas
1.6 4.8 14.7 9.2 -29.2
  Utilities
11.0 18.9 213.4 19.4 121.7
  Construction
35.9 8.6 412.9 11.5 -1,063.6
  Manufacturing
194.4 17.1 2,101.0 10.8 -3,660.0
Services-producing sector 455.6 9.6 4,638.3 10.2 -14,237.7
  Trade
84.2 8.8 737.0 8.7 -2,310.3
  Transportation and warehousing
26.6 9.4 261.6 9.8 -596.9
  Finance, insurance, real estate and leasing
49.4 11.1 397.6 8.1 -1,545.6
  Professional, scientific and technical services
55.8 12.5 658.4 11.8 -1,256.4
  Management of companies and administrative and other support services
33.4 12.2 297.8 8.9 -869.2
  Educational services
9.5 2.8 107.6 11.4 -606.0
  Health care and social assistance
51.7 8.2 553.1 10.7 -631.2
  Information, culture and recreation
42.8 12.7 462.8 10.8 -1,041.5
  Accommodation and food services
30.2 7.7 288.6 9.6 -1,047.9
  Other services
20.7 7.6 154.5 7.5 -742.7
  Public administration
51.4 14.3 719.2 14.0 -3,590.0
    Federal
16.7 9.8 198.6 11.9 -2,690.6
    Provincial
14.0 18.1 176.5 12.6 -914.3
    Municipal and other
20.8 18.6 344.0 16.6 14.9
1 Survey conducted in September and industry information comes from person's job in September. Because some people had no industry information in September but lost/gained work in August, the sum of all industries does not add to the total.



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Date Modified: 2003-10-30 Important Notices