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Porting 1 job = 1 person on social support

In Canada want to allow companies like Imperial Oil to port jobs to BTC and KLTC, then Canada needs to provide social safety net that will help us maintain our lifestyle.

So, basically, I am saying Canada needs to tax companies that are porting jobs outside the country and use those dollars for a better social safety net.

If you calculate the tax rate, it will be so high that no company will be willing to port jobs overseas anymore.

Readers to this website, asking your help to spread this message. We need to pass a Canadian law that ported jobs will have to be taxed by the hour.


Province’s Reaction

It’s so infuriating to read in the news how the Provincial government tries to tie the layoffs to the feds, focusing solely on the pipeline or some perceived “red tape.” I’m with IRP, and there was no shortage of projects (less so now, no one knows what to do). For approvals, we asked AER or provincial bodies.

Those corporations don’t care about ease of regulations - they only understand regulatory consequences and cost impacts. Right now, it’s very cheap for them to get rid of all of us with no reason given. I almost can’t blame IOL (or more so Exxon) for what they did. It aligns very well with the nonsensical decisions they were making. BTC, DTI, how is this allowed in Canada


Resistance Begins Here — Stand Against Imperial’s Job Offshoring

Friends, Imperial Oil is offshoring thousands of Calgary jobs while taking advantage of Alberta’s resources, tax breaks, and our province’s livelihood. We can’t let this go unchallenged. Here’s what you can do today:

1.  Write to your MLA and MP demanding they stop public benefits to companies that offshore Canadian jobs.
2.  Write to local and national newspapers (Calgary Herald, Globe & Mail, CBC, etc.) to expose how Imperial is abandoning Alberta workers.
3.  Write to the Alberta Energy Regulator and other agencies asking them to review Imperial’s operations and hold them accountable for both job losses and environmental impacts.
  1. Template-
    Dear [MLA/MP Name],

I am writing as a concerned Albertan. Imperial Oil has announced mass layoffs in Calgary while offshoring all these jobs to India. This is a betrayal of our province and its people, especially after Imperial benefited from Alberta’s resources, tax breaks, and royalty concessions.

What’s worse — Imperial is not scaling down operations. The company plans to increase oil sands output while offshoring even more Canadian jobs abroad.

I urge you to:

  1. Publicly demand that Imperial disclose the number of jobs being offshored.
  2. Push for clawbacks on any tax or royalty benefits if jobs are moved overseas.
  3. Support legislation requiring companies receiving public benefits to keep jobs in Canada.

Albertans deserve leaders who will defend local jobs and hold corporations accountable. Please let me know what actions you will take.

Sincerely,
[Your Full Name]
[Your City, Alberta]

2-
To the Editor,

Imperial Oil is offshoring thousands of Calgary jobs while continuing to profit from Alberta’s oil sands and enjoy generous tax and royalty concessions. This decision guts our community, threatens livelihoods, and sends Canadian prosperity abroad while leaving behind environmental and social costs.

Importantly, Imperial is not reducing operations — in fact, the company plans to pump even more barrels while cutting Alberta jobs and shipping the work overseas.

We should not reward corporations that abandon Alberta workers. Imperial must be held accountable — through public scrutiny, political action, and regulatory oversight. Our leaders must make it clear: if you benefit from Alberta’s resources, you must also invest in Alberta’s people.

Sincerely,
[Your Full Name]
[Your City]

3-
To Whom It May Concern,

I am requesting that the Alberta Energy Regulator and related oversight bodies review Imperial Oil’s recent decision to offshore large portions of its Calgary workforce. These job cuts raise serious concerns about the company’s ability to maintain adequate local oversight, environmental monitoring, and compliance at its oil sands operations.

Given Imperial’s history of environmental violations and the importance of Alberta jobs tied to resource development, we need transparency on how these workforce changes affect safety, compliance, and community obligations.

I urge you to require Imperial to disclose the scale of offshoring and to assess its impact on operational accountability in Alberta.

Sincerely,
[Your Full Name]
[Your City]


As far as pranks go, this one is up there

What a great prank. First it was 6 AM before markets open for a big announcement, then it was in the morning when business opened, then it was afternoon so that managers get a heads up first. Now it’s end of day when markets have closed. Some are saying it’s Friday. This sounds like those rapture predictions - it’s today, no, tommorow, no, next week for sure!!! L-M-A-O is all I have to say


CNRL Yes or No

Generally speaking, most O&G companies are a mess. Changes to work from home; limited to no longer available, chaotic environments, and inconsistent leadership. I've worked at a few, and each one felt like its own kind of circus.

That said, what makes CNRL stand out (negatively) compared to peers like Cenovus or Suncor?

If you started at CNRL’s Calgary corporate office, what do you wish you’d known beforehand? Would you genuinely advise others to steer clear?


Don't make it easy for them

What is about to happen is part of a global strategy to reduced headcount and move our Canadian jobs to Houston and the BTC. ExxonMobil still wants our oil and has plans to increase production and develop Aspen plus other assets. If they want our oil, the jobs should be here. We may not be able to do much, but we can make it harder. Write to Smith, Carney, even Brian Jean and APEGA. It may not stop them, but it could make them think twice or slow them down, which is worth a try.


Oracle is undertaking significant layoffs..October 2025

Oracle is undertaking significant layoffs, impacting hundreds of employees across its Bay Area (Redwood City, Pleasanton, Santa Clara) and Seattle offices, with effects expected to take place in October 2025. These cuts, focused primarily on cloud-related positions, are part of a broader restructuring to reduce costs and improve efficiency as the company invests heavily in artificial intelligence

Details of the Layoffs

Bay Area: A total of 188 employees are being laid off in Redwood City (143) and Pleasanton (45), with an additional 101 employees cut in Santa Clara. 

Seattle: 161 employees are being laid off from the company's Seattle operations.
Global Impact: The cuts are also affecting employees in India and Canada.
Timing: The layoffs are set to take effect in mid-October 2025.
Affected Roles: The cuts primarily affect positions within Oracle's Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) unit, including software developers, managers, technical support analysts, project managers, and roles in media services and sovereign cloud efforts


(AI) First getting rid of most employees

They let everyone go, especially acquired like hMF, keeping sales teams but no one to patch or support the products. EMEA will now become India only (eventually), US is just Canada.

Justifying the cost being saved by getting unskilled people in India (replacing the existing) to submit canned responses, knowing customers won't be able to immediately migrate to alternative or seek damages on SLA.

Probably going to fail miserably with this all talk with his own talkshow CEO. Talking about AI, creating a snowy mascot to hop on stage but not actually giving his employees the tools.

With all the diversity promoted, where is your Indian AI mascot?

At least we all got some AI experience as we were filling in those lead to nowhere Career Week forms, another true example to this company being all for show, fake new procedures and hard on it's hard working employees for nothing.

"Better together" never made sense, not when you are forced to commute 2 hours to an empty office, only to conference with 3 other regions who need to do the same.

Good luck to the few left to train their replacements.