The Department of Human Resources and Skills Development Canada was created in December 2003, when Human Resources Development Canada was split into two separate departments: HRSDC and Social Development Canada. Though they continued to share many common services and operations, HRSDC was to focus on workforce-related aspects of the former HRDC portfolio, while SDC was to focus on social support programs for children, families and seniors. The split was given formal legal effect when the Department of Human Resources and Skills Development Act and the Department of Social Development Act were enacted in July 2005.
ESDC delivers $87 billion in programs and services and has approximately 24,000 employees. Approximately 19,000 of those employees work under the Service Canada banner.
Officials and structure
;* Minister of Employment, Workforce Development and Disability Inclusion: Hon. Carla Qualtrough ;* Minister of Families, Children and Social Development: Hon. Ahmed Hussen ;* Minister of Labour : Hon. Filomena Tassi ;* Minister of Seniors : Hon. Deb Schulte
Controversies
2012/2013 privacy breach
On January 11, 2013, Minister Diane Finley announced that a hard drive containing information of 583,000 student loan borrowers had been lost from a Canada Student Loans Program /HRSDC office in Gatineau, Quebec. Borrowers who registered a loan between 2000–2006 were potentially affected. The information on the hard drive contained full names, Social Insurance Numbers, contact information, and loan balances. The hard drive also contained information on 250 HRSDC employees. Concerns of privacy breaches and identity theft led to the filing of three class-action suits against the federal government on behalf of the affected students. On January 18, 2013, the Office of the Privacy Commissioner of Canada stated that a formal investigation had been launched. The stated outcome of this investigation was to provide information to organizations and individuals to improve privacy protection. The RCMP was notified but is waiting for the outcome of the Office of the Privacy Commissioner of Canada's investigation to do their own investigation. This incident has become known as "1 in 60", representing the ratio of affected individuals to the Canadian population as a whole.
Canadian Summer Jobs program
In 2018, the government of Justin Trudeau introduced a new mandatory criteria for eligible employers and projects of the Canada Summer Jobs program, for which "the core mandate of the organization must respect individual human rights in Canada, including the values underlying the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms as well as other rights" like the "reproductive rights and the right to be free from discrimination". After nine ongoing Federal Court challenges, the complaints of the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops in union with the Canadian Council of Christian Charities, the requirement was rewritten and become a mandatory point for eligible projects and job activities, which must not "actively work to undermine or restrict a woman’s access to sexual and reproductive health services.".