In 1996, a group of Canadian business leaders gathered with a shared conviction: that the talent, skills and ambition existed in this country. What was missing was the bridge. Out of that conviction, Career Edge was born.
This year, Career Edge turns 30. Three decades of connecting leading Canadian employers with diverse, qualified talent through paid internships and placements have left us standing at a moment that, in many ways, looks remarkably familiar to the one our founders faced. The names of the challenges have changed, but the urgency remains the same.
Canada’s labour market is navigating one of its most complex chapters in recent memory. Ontario’s annual unemployment rate climbed to 7.0 percent in 2024, up from 5.6 percent the year prior, the highest level since 2014, outside the pandemic years. In the Greater Toronto Area specifically, the unemployment rate reached 8.9 percent as of September 2025. Meanwhile, job vacancies declined by 24.4 percent nationwide in 2024 compared to the previous year. Employers are hiring less, yet qualified, motivated talent is available and waiting. Too much of it remains unreached.
This is exactly the environment Career Edge was designed for. And this anniversary is not just a celebration. It is a declaration of what comes next.
Where It All Began
Career Edge was conceived by the late civic visionary David Pecaut, a name synonymous with reimagining what Toronto could be, and brought to life alongside Urban Joseph, the former Vice-Chairman of TD Bank, who worked closely with Pecaut to design a model that could address the youth unemployment crisis of the mid-1990s.
The idea was both practical and radical. Rather than asking employers to take a chance on unproven candidates, Career Edge structured the relationship as a paid internship, reducing the risk while creating genuine pathways. The result was Canada’s first online job posting board, an initiative that quickly earned the support of the federal government, including endorsements from Prime Minister Jean Chretien, Paul Martin, and Frank McKenna, who became Honorary Chair in 1998.
“Career Edge’s mandate was to reduce youth unemployment, which it did and continues to do, but we need to do more.” Urban Joseph, Honorary Board Chair Emeritus, Career Edge
Thirty Years of Quiet Work and Visible Impact
Numbers matter in this conversation, so let us be specific. Since our founding, Career Edge has helped more than 16,000 people launch careers. We have worked with over 1,000 Canadian employers, including organizations like RBC, Bell, and the City of Toronto. Our alumni now contribute an estimated one billion dollars annually to the Canadian economy. These are not projections. They are the compounding result of one internship at a time, one employer partner at a time, for thirty years.
The 80 percent figure has been a point of pride for this organization for many years: consistently, 8 out of 10 Career Edge interns have gone on to secure full-time positions following their placement. That is not an accident. It is the result of a model built on real employer relationships, real skills matching, and real accountability on both sides.
The Case for Structured Hiring
There is a meaningful difference between saying your organization values diversity and building the structural conditions that make diverse hiring inevitable. Career Edge has always operated in the space between those two statements.
A paid internship is not a charitable gesture, nor is diversity hiring. Both are business investments with measurable returns. When an employer requests a Career Edge candidate, they receive a vetted, eligible candidate with specific skills and a genuine motivation to prove themselves. The organization provides end-to-end support throughout the internship. The employer pays a fair wage. At the end of the placement, 8 out of ten hires convert to full-time.
More importantly, what the employer gains extends beyond the hire; they gain a new perspective on their team. They often gain a connection to a community they were not previously reaching as an employer brand. And they gain the institutional knowledge, built over thirty years, of what it actually takes to make this kind of placement succeed long-term.
What Comes Next: Thirty Commitments for the Next Thirty Years
The 30-year milestone carries real weight. So we would like to express our sincerest gratitude to those who support and believe in our message and understand the true impact and mission of our work. We couldn’t have done it without all of you.
For the employers who have been part of this story, it is an opportunity to see the full scale of what that partnership has contributed. For those who have not yet partnered with Career Edge, it is the clearest possible picture of what is available to you.
The labour market will keep evolving. Automation and AI are already reshaping entry-level roles and creating new categories of need. The demographic composition of Canada’s workforce will continue to diversify. The organizations that are building structured, intentional pipelines into equity-deserving communities right now will be the ones with the adaptable, skilled, and loyal workforces that every employer says they want.
That is what 30 years of this work has taught us. We are proud of what 30 years have built. We are even more committed to what comes after. Ready to be part of our story?