A modern, voluntary, competitive and paid national service initiative that helps young Canadians gain skills, purpose and experience while serving communities and strengthening Canada’s readiness.

Canada is entering a period that will demand more from all of us.

Rising geopolitical uncertainty, climate-related emergencies, workforce shortages, infrastructure demands and growing pressure on communities are reshaping the challenges facing our country. At the same time, many young Canadians are searching for purpose, practical experience, opportunity and a stronger sense of belonging.

Engage Canada is advancing the case for a modern, voluntary, competitive, structured and paid national youth service program for Canadians aged 18 to 25.

The goal is simple: create meaningful opportunities for young people to serve their country, develop practical skills, strengthen communities and help build Canada’s future.

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Our submission outlines recommendations to support stronger economic policy and sustainable growth.

Why now

Canada needs more than goodwill. It needs national capacity.

Across Canada, communities are facing new pressures that require more people, stronger systems, and greater readiness.

More Frequent Emergencies

More Frequent Emergencies

Wildfires, floods, extreme weather events, evacuations, and infrastructure disruptions are becoming more common and more demanding.

Labour and Productivity Challenges

Labour and Productivity Challenges

Many sectors face workforce shortages and increasing demand for skilled and motivated workers.

Pressure on National Readiness Systems

Pressure on National Readiness Systems

The Canadian Armed Forces, reserve systems, emergency responders, and public institutions face growing expectations.

Young Canadians Seeking Purpose

Young Canadians Seeking Purpose

Many young people are looking for practical experience, useful skills, belonging, leadership opportunities, and a clearer path into adult life.

Stretched Community Organizations

Stretched Community Organizations

Nonprofits, charities, municipalities, and community organizations are being asked to do more with limited resources.

“This is not about nostalgia. It is about readiness.”

Canada has one of the most capable generations of young people in its history.

The question is whether we are providing meaningful opportunities worthy of their talent, energy, and ambition.

The proposal

A modern national service program for young Canadians

Engage Canada is proposing a voluntary, competitive, and paid national youth service program for Canadians aged 18 to 25.

Each participant would begin with a shared national basic military training experience. This is a critical feature of the model. It would bring young Canadians from across the country together through a common foundation focused on readiness, discipline, teamwork, leadership, safety, emergency preparedness, civic responsibility, and service. Where appropriate, elements could be delivered in partnership with the Canadian Armed Forces or other qualified institutions.

After completing basic military training, participants could choose service pathways aligned with their interests, abilities, and Canada's evolving needs.

The program is intended to strengthen Canada while creating meaningful value for participants through skills development, leadership experience, practical training, and service.

Key Features

  • Voluntary participation
  • Competitive application process
  • Paid service placements
  • National standards
  • Basic military training as a shared foundation
  • Multiple service pathways after the training foundation
  • Practical skills development
  • Measurable public value
  • A pilot-first approach before national scale

What makes this different

A serious national opportunity, not another volunteer program

Canada has many excellent volunteer programs and community organizations.

Engage Canada is different.

This is not a traditional volunteer initiative. It is a proposed national service model designed to be structured, paid, competitive, measurable, and connected to Canada's most important priorities.

Person counting hundred-dollar bills.

Paid and structured

Participants would receive compensation for their service and be supported through a clear, organized program model.

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Built around national needs

Service placements would support emergency preparedness, community resilience, environmental response, skilled trades, Northern service, and defence-related pathways.

People climbing a rope net outdoors.

A shared foundation

Every participant would begin with basic military training, creating a common experience focused on readiness, teamwork, discipline, leadership, and service.

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Focused on skills and purpose

Participants would gain practical experience, leadership development, confidence, transferable skills, and a stronger sense of civic responsibility.

Woman presenting ideas to attentive colleagues.

Designed to be measured

A pilot program would allow outcomes to be evaluated, lessons to be applied, and the model to be improved before national expansion.

The service model

A common foundation. Multiple ways to serve.

Engage Canada is exploring a model where participants begin with a common foundation of basic military training before moving into service streams aligned with their interests, strengths, and Canada's needs.

The shared foundation would focus on:

  • Physical readiness
  • Civic responsibility
  • Teamwork
  • Discipline
  • Leadership
  • Resilience
  • Emergency preparedness
  • Service

Following this foundation, participants could choose among multiple pathways while remaining connected through a shared experience and common sense of responsibility.

Canadian flag hanging on classical building facade.

Proposed service streams

Service where Canada needs it most

A modern national youth service program could support multiple areas of national importance.

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Community and Social Service

Support for municipalities, community and non-profit organizations, newcomers, seniors, youth mentorship initiatives, and essential community programs.

Firefighters extinguishing blaze with hoses.

Emergency Preparedness and Response

Building surge capacity for floods, wildfires, evacuations, storms, and other emergencies affecting Canadian communities.

Mountain lake with snowy peaks and forest.

Climate and Environmental Resilience

Supporting conservation, restoration, mitigation, preparedness, and environmental stewardship projects.

Canadian flag on snowy mountain landscape.

Northern and Arctic Service

Supporting Northern communities, strengthening local capacity, promoting environmental stewardship, and deepening understanding of Canada's North.

Worker on lift wearing orange safety helmet.

Skilled Trades and Nation-Building Support

Contributing to infrastructure, housing, skilled trades development, and major national projects.

Canadian flag patch on military uniform.

Defence-Related Pathways

Providing opportunities for participants interested in continued service connected to the Canadian Armed Forces, reserves, or broader national readiness needs.

How it could work

Pilot first. Learn fast. Scale responsibly.

Engage Canada believes a national service program should be built carefully, tested properly, and expanded only after evidence demonstrates success.

A pilot program would allow Canada to recruit participants, establish partnerships, measure outcomes, and refine the model before national expansion.

Rescue team in action by the river.

Why it matters for young Canadians

A generation looking for purpose deserves a national opportunity.

Many young Canadians want to contribute to something larger than themselves.

They want experience.

They want skills.

They want direction.

They want opportunities to lead.

They want to know their country recognises their potential.

A modern national service program would provide meaningful opportunities to grow while serving Canada.

Participants could gain:

  • Paid experience
  • Practical skills
  • Leadership development
  • Confidence and resilience
  • Mentorship and networks
  • A stronger sense of purpose and belonging
  • Career readiness
  • A meaningful way to serve Canada

This should be a program that opens doors.

Why it matters for Canada

A stronger generation. A more resilient country.

Canada needs more capacity.

A modern national youth service program would strengthen readiness, resilience, skills development, and civic participation across the country.

Canada Gains a Stronger Culture of Service and Readiness

A national service model helps strengthen civic responsibility, resilience, and social cohesion.

Many countries have successfully used national service, civil service, reserve models, and youth service initiatives to strengthen readiness and social resilience.

Engage Canada is studying these examples while developing a model that remains distinctly Canadian: voluntary, competitive, paid, practical, and designed to strengthen existing institutions.

A modern national service program will not solve every challenge.

But it could become one of the most practical ways to strengthen Canada from the ground up.

  • Canada Gains More Emergency and Community Capacity

    More trained individuals available to support communities during periods of need.

  • Communities Gain Trained and Motivated Young People

    Local organizations benefit from meaningful service and additional capacity.

  • Young Canadians Gain Practical Skills and Confidence

    Participants develop valuable experience that supports future careers and leadership opportunities.

  • Employers Gain a Stronger Talent Pipeline

    Workforce development improves through practical training and hands-on experience.

Global insights, Canadian design

What Canada can learn from others

Engage Canada is studying national service, civic service and reserve models from allied and democratic countries while developing a model that is distinctly Canadian: voluntary, selective, paid, practical and designed to strengthen existing institutions.

Rather than duplicating any single foreign system, Engage Canada is analyzing diverse, proven international frameworks to extract best practices and build a unique, home-grown solution.

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Who is behind Engage Canada

A non-partisan group committed to national renewal

Engage Canada is being advanced by a non-partisan working group of Canadians with experience across public service, business, defence, education, philanthropy, Indigenous engagement, sport, governance, and civic leadership. The group is united by a shared belief that Canada should explore a practical, credible, and distinctly Canadian national youth service model.

Michael Burns

Chair, Engage Canada

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Alice Aiken

Professor and former Vice-President of Research, Dalhousie University

 

Brett Boudreau

Senior Consultant, Veritas Strategic Communications, and Col (Ret'd)

 

Casey Antolak

President and Global Managing Partner, Keishi Mori Capital / Keishi Kawa Advisory; former Scotiabank executive.

Cecile Chung

General Counsel and Corporate Secretary, Samuel, Son & Co.

Chief J. Willie Littlechild

Former Grand Chief, Treaty Six; former Member of Parliament.

Christy Clark

Former Premier of British Columbia.

Colin Dickinson

Co-founder and President, Evea Ventures.

Dan Donovan

Founder and Publisher, Ottawa Life Magazine.

Don Cranston, MBA

Vice Chair, Client Advisory Focus Wealth Management

Greg MacKenzie

Chief Legal Officer and Corporate Secretary, 407 International Inc. / 407 ETR.

Ian Brodie

Political Scientist, University of Calgary; former Chief of Staff to the Prime Minister of Canada.

Marc Kealey

Chief Advocate, Kealey and Associates.

Patrick Gladney

Founder and President, Collective Motion.

Stay connected

Help shape Canada’s next national service model

Engage Canada is in the early stages of building support, refining the model and engaging partners across the country.

We welcome conversations with governments, Indigenous communities, nonprofits, educators, employers, civic leaders, young Canadians and others who want to help strengthen Canada’s future.

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