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CANADIAN INDUSTRY ONLINE - NOVEMBER 2012
ity service. When employees are ready
for a new challenge with City Welding,
we help streamline the process to assist
our employees to earn different levels
of certification required for work in the
industry while always insisting that
quality of workmanship and safety are
a priority,” the company says.
The company regularly takes on
apprentices with little or no experi-
ence, and gets involved in the com-
munity through charitable causes and
sports. Clearly City Welding is com-
mitted to the next generation of work-
ers.
FUTURE GROWTH
Why will City Welding continue
to succeed? Brouillette says, “because
we don’t just manufacture one wid-
get—the flexibility of our shop, that’s
what keeps us moving forward.”
When there is a slow-down in
the economy, we don’t feel it as bad
or as soon as everyone else. We’re not
locked into one product or service.”
The company’s next step will
be to bring their services outside the
Sudbury basin, and look for some in-
ternational challenges in the next few
years. Regardless of how far they have
to go for their customers, one thing
will remain constant for City Welding:
the company will do it all, jobs big or
small.
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