Employer Intelligence Profile

Société Québécoise des Infrastructures LMIA employer profile

Québec, QC G1R 5P8

Société Québécoise des Infrastructures appears in the visible LMIA employer record set with 37 approved positions across 14 sponsoring role tracks in Quebec. The clearest role signals are Construction managers, Electricians (except industrial and power system), Industrial instrument technicians and mechanics, and the latest visible activity appears in April to June 2025.

Hiring foreign workers: Yes Active in 2025

Executive summary

Approved positions on record 37
Sponsoring job tracks 14
Provinces in scope 1
Latest visible activity April to June 2025

Visible streams: 1 | Core stream mix: High Wage

Confidence Promising hiring confidence
Pathway fit Emerging PR Pathway Fit
Role mix Construction managers, Electricians (except industrial and power system), Industrial instrument technicians and mechanics

Sponsoring roles

Sponsoring jobs with LMIA support

Société Québécoise des Infrastructures currently shows 14 sponsoring role tracks and 37 approved positions on record. The clearest role signals on this page are Construction managers, Electricians (except industrial and power system), Industrial instrument technicians and mechanics.

Construction managers This sponsoring role is shown with the legacy NOC 2016 code carried in the historical LMIA record. Older employer records can use 4-digit codes even when the newer Canadian classification now uses 5-digit NOCs. Legacy NOC 711 TEER N/A Quebec High Wage 8 positions

No editorial employer-expectation summary was attached to this role record.

This is an independent editorial summary based on visible LMIA role patterns and is not an official Government of Canada NOC description.

The direct Government of Canada NOC profile link is not attached to this role record yet.

Salaries are shown in CAD and reflect national hourly wage estimates. Employers may refine expectations, language needs, or licensing requirements during screening.

As an electricians (except industrial and power system), you will work on electrical systems, industrial maintenance, safety compliance, and troubleshooting while keeping tasks organized, following employer procedures, and coordinating with the team as needed.

Role signals
Electrical Systems Industrial Maintenance Safety Compliance Troubleshooting
  • Apply role-specific judgment in electrical systems
  • Keep industrial maintenance organized, accurate, and aligned with employer procedures
  • Coordinate clearly with supervisors, coworkers, or clients on safety compliance tasks
  • Maintain safe, dependable follow-through while supporting troubleshooting
  • Education: Employers may accept secondary school combined with job-related training or a relevant support program.
  • Licence or certification: Role-specific licensing, registration, certification, or a driver’s licence may be needed in some settings.
This is an independent editorial summary and category set based on role context and visible LMIA patterns. It is not an official Government of Canada NOC description.

See the Government of Canada NOC profile

Salaries are shown in CAD and reflect national hourly wage estimates. Employers may refine expectations, language needs, or licensing requirements during screening.

As an industrial instrument technician and mechanics, you will work on instrumentation, maintenance, troubleshooting, calibration, and repair while keeping tasks organized, following employer procedures, and coordinating with the team as needed.

Role signals
Instrumentation Maintenance Troubleshooting Calibration Repair Control Systems
  • Apply role-specific judgment in instrumentation
  • Keep maintenance organized, accurate, and aligned with employer procedures
  • Coordinate clearly with supervisors, coworkers, or clients on troubleshooting tasks
  • Maintain safe, dependable follow-through while supporting calibration
  • Education: Employers may accept secondary school combined with job-related training or a relevant support program.
  • Experience: Relevant hands-on experience or supervised practical training is commonly expected.
  • Licence or certification: Role-specific licensing, registration, certification, or a driver’s licence may be needed in some settings.
This is an independent editorial summary and category set based on role context and visible LMIA patterns. It is not an official Government of Canada NOC description.

See the Government of Canada NOC profile

Salaries are shown in CAD and reflect national hourly wage estimates. Employers may refine expectations, language needs, or licensing requirements during screening.

As an information systems analyst and consultant, you will work on information technology, consulting, business solutions, systems analysis, and client consultation while keeping tasks organized, following employer procedures, and coordinating with the team as needed.

Role signals
Information Technology Consulting Business Solutions Systems Analysis Client Consultation Efficiency Improvement
  • Apply role-specific judgment in information technology
  • Keep consulting organized, accurate, and aligned with employer procedures
  • Coordinate clearly with supervisors, coworkers, or clients on business solutions tasks
  • Maintain safe, dependable follow-through while supporting systems analysis
  • Education: Employers usually expect post-secondary training in a related field.
  • Experience: Relevant software development experience is commonly expected, and some roles value prior programming experience.
  • Licence or certification: Role-specific licensing, registration, certification, or a driver’s licence may be needed in some settings.
This is an independent editorial summary and category set based on role context and visible LMIA patterns. It is not an official Government of Canada NOC description.

See the Government of Canada NOC profile

Salaries are shown in CAD and reflect national hourly wage estimates. Employers may refine expectations, language needs, or licensing requirements during screening.

As an information systems specialist, you will work on technical support, information technology, application development, system analysis, and user training while keeping tasks organized, following employer procedures, and coordinating with the team as needed.

Role signals
Technical Support Information Technology Application Development System Analysis User Training Data Analysis
  • Apply role-specific judgment in technical support
  • Keep information technology organized, accurate, and aligned with employer procedures
  • Coordinate clearly with supervisors, coworkers, or clients on application development tasks
  • Maintain safe, dependable follow-through while supporting system analysis
  • Education: Employers usually expect post-secondary training in a related field.
  • Experience: Relevant software development experience is commonly expected, and some roles value prior programming experience.
  • Licence or certification: Role-specific licensing, registration, certification, or a driver’s licence may be needed in some settings.
This is an independent editorial summary and category set based on role context and visible LMIA patterns. It is not an official Government of Canada NOC description.

See the Government of Canada NOC profile

Salaries are shown in CAD and reflect national hourly wage estimates. Employers may refine expectations, language needs, or licensing requirements during screening.

As a power engineer and power systems operator, you will work on power generation, safety compliance, equipment maintenance, energy management, and troubleshooting while keeping tasks organized, following employer procedures, and coordinating with the team as needed.

Role signals
Power Generation Safety Compliance Equipment Maintenance Energy Management Troubleshooting Systems Operation
  • Apply role-specific judgment in power generation
  • Keep safety compliance organized, accurate, and aligned with employer procedures
  • Coordinate clearly with supervisors, coworkers, or clients on equipment maintenance tasks
  • Maintain safe, dependable follow-through while supporting energy management
  • Education: Employers may accept secondary school combined with job-related training or a relevant support program.
  • Experience: Relevant hands-on experience or supervised practical training is commonly expected.
  • Licence or certification: Role-specific licensing, registration, certification, or a driver’s licence may be needed in some settings.
This is an independent editorial summary and category set based on role context and visible LMIA patterns. It is not an official Government of Canada NOC description.

See the Government of Canada NOC profile

Salaries are shown in CAD and reflect national hourly wage estimates. Employers may refine expectations, language needs, or licensing requirements during screening.

As a construction manager, you will work on construction management, safety compliance, project planning, team leadership, and financial oversight while keeping tasks organized, following employer procedures, and coordinating with the team as needed.

Role signals
Construction Management Safety Compliance Project Planning Team Leadership Financial Oversight Project Coordination
  • Apply role-specific judgment in construction management
  • Keep safety compliance organized, accurate, and aligned with employer procedures
  • Coordinate clearly with supervisors, coworkers, or clients on project planning tasks
  • Maintain safe, dependable follow-through while supporting team leadership
  • Education: Employers usually expect post-secondary training in a related field, and some roles may prefer advanced study.
  • Experience: Relevant hands-on experience or supervised practical training is commonly expected.
  • Licence or certification: Professional engineering licensing may be needed when the role involves practising as a Professional Engineer or approving engineering work.
This is an independent editorial summary and category set based on role context and visible LMIA patterns. It is not an official Government of Canada NOC description.

See the Government of Canada NOC profile

Salaries are shown in CAD and reflect national hourly wage estimates. Employers may refine expectations, language needs, or licensing requirements during screening.

As a plumber, you will work on plumbing installation, pipe and fixture repair, water and drainage lines, leak troubleshooting, and equipment maintenance while keeping tasks organized, following employer procedures, and coordinating with the team as needed.

Role signals
Plumbing Installation Pipe and Fixture Repair Water and Drainage Lines Leak Troubleshooting Equipment Maintenance Safety Compliance
  • Apply role-specific judgment in plumbing installation
  • Keep pipe and fixture repair organized, accurate, and aligned with employer procedures
  • Coordinate clearly with supervisors, coworkers, or clients on water and drainage lines tasks
  • Maintain safe, dependable follow-through while supporting leak troubleshooting
  • Education: Employers may accept secondary school combined with job-related training or a relevant support program.
  • Experience: Relevant hands-on experience or supervised practical training is commonly expected.
  • Licence or certification: Role-specific licensing, registration, certification, or a driver’s licence may be needed in some settings.
This is an independent editorial summary and category set based on role context and visible LMIA patterns. It is not an official Government of Canada NOC description.

See the Government of Canada NOC profile

Salaries are shown in CAD and reflect national hourly wage estimates. Employers may refine expectations, language needs, or licensing requirements during screening.

As a property administrator, you will work on property management, tenant relations, financial oversight, maintenance coordination, and lease negotiation while keeping tasks organized, following employer procedures, and coordinating with the team as needed.

Role signals
Property Management Tenant Relations Financial Oversight Maintenance Coordination Lease Negotiation Financial Reporting
  • Apply role-specific judgment in property management
  • Keep tenant relations organized, accurate, and aligned with employer procedures
  • Coordinate clearly with supervisors, coworkers, or clients on financial oversight tasks
  • Maintain safe, dependable follow-through while supporting maintenance coordination
  • Education: Employers may accept secondary school combined with job-related training or a relevant support program.
  • Experience: Relevant hands-on experience or supervised practical training is commonly expected.
  • Licence or certification: Role-specific licensing, registration, certification, or a driver’s licence may be needed in some settings.
This is an independent editorial summary and category set based on role context and visible LMIA patterns. It is not an official Government of Canada NOC description.

See the Government of Canada NOC profile

Salaries are shown in CAD and reflect national hourly wage estimates. Employers may refine expectations, language needs, or licensing requirements during screening.

As an administrative assistant, you will work on scheduling, office administration, document preparation, clerical support, and team support while keeping tasks organized, following employer procedures, and coordinating with the team as needed.

Role signals
Scheduling Office Administration Document Preparation Clerical Support Team Support Administrative Support
  • Apply role-specific judgment in scheduling
  • Keep office administration organized, accurate, and aligned with employer procedures
  • Coordinate clearly with supervisors, coworkers, or clients on document preparation tasks
  • Maintain safe, dependable follow-through while supporting clerical support
  • Education: Employers may accept secondary school combined with job-related training or a relevant support program.
  • Experience: Relevant hands-on experience or supervised practical training is commonly expected.
This is an independent editorial summary and category set based on role context and visible LMIA patterns. It is not an official Government of Canada NOC description.

See the Government of Canada NOC profile

Salaries are shown in CAD and reflect national hourly wage estimates. Employers may refine expectations, language needs, or licensing requirements during screening.

As an administrative officer, you will work on policy development, administrative support, office management, organizational skills, and financial oversight while keeping tasks organized, following employer procedures, and coordinating with the team as needed.

Role signals
Policy Development Administrative Support Office Management Organizational Skills Financial Oversight Team Coordination
  • Apply role-specific judgment in policy development
  • Keep administrative support organized, accurate, and aligned with employer procedures
  • Coordinate clearly with supervisors, coworkers, or clients on office management tasks
  • Maintain safe, dependable follow-through while supporting organizational skills
  • Education: Employers may accept secondary school combined with job-related training or a relevant support program.
  • Experience: Relevant hands-on experience or supervised practical training is commonly expected.
  • Licence or certification: Role-specific licensing, registration, certification, or a driver’s licence may be needed in some settings.
This is an independent editorial summary and category set based on role context and visible LMIA patterns. It is not an official Government of Canada NOC description.

See the Government of Canada NOC profile

Salaries are shown in CAD and reflect national hourly wage estimates. Employers may refine expectations, language needs, or licensing requirements during screening.

As a computer engineers (except software engineer and designers), you will work on computer hardware, data analysis, engineering, system design, and technical testing while keeping tasks organized, following employer procedures, and coordinating with the team as needed.

Role signals
Computer Hardware Data Analysis Engineering System Design Technical Testing
  • Apply role-specific judgment in computer hardware
  • Keep data analysis organized, accurate, and aligned with employer procedures
  • Coordinate clearly with supervisors, coworkers, or clients on engineering tasks
  • Maintain safe, dependable follow-through while supporting system design
  • Education: Employers usually expect post-secondary training in a related field, and some roles may prefer advanced study.
  • Experience: Relevant hands-on experience or supervised practical training is commonly expected.
  • Licence or certification: Professional engineering licensing may be needed when the role involves practising as a Professional Engineer or approving engineering work.
This is an independent editorial summary and category set based on role context and visible LMIA patterns. It is not an official Government of Canada NOC description.

See the Government of Canada NOC profile

Salaries are shown in CAD and reflect national hourly wage estimates. Employers may refine expectations, language needs, or licensing requirements during screening.

As a power engineer and power systems operator, you will work on energy management, safety compliance, equipment maintenance, power generation, and troubleshooting while keeping tasks organized, following employer procedures, and coordinating with the team as needed.

Role signals
Energy Management Safety Compliance Equipment Maintenance Power Generation Troubleshooting Emergency Response
  • Apply role-specific judgment in energy management
  • Keep safety compliance organized, accurate, and aligned with employer procedures
  • Coordinate clearly with supervisors, coworkers, or clients on equipment maintenance tasks
  • Maintain safe, dependable follow-through while supporting power generation
  • Education: Employers may accept secondary school combined with job-related training or a relevant support program.
  • Experience: Relevant hands-on experience or supervised practical training is commonly expected.
  • Licence or certification: Role-specific licensing, registration, certification, or a driver’s licence may be needed in some settings.
This is an independent editorial summary and category set based on role context and visible LMIA patterns. It is not an official Government of Canada NOC description.

See the Government of Canada NOC profile

Salaries are shown in CAD and reflect national hourly wage estimates. Employers may refine expectations, language needs, or licensing requirements during screening.

As an user support technician, you will work on computer hardware, software installation, technical support, troubleshooting, and user training while keeping tasks organized, following employer procedures, and coordinating with the team as needed.

Role signals
Computer Hardware Software Installation Technical Support Troubleshooting User Training
  • Apply role-specific judgment in computer hardware
  • Keep software installation organized, accurate, and aligned with employer procedures
  • Coordinate clearly with supervisors, coworkers, or clients on technical support tasks
  • Maintain safe, dependable follow-through while supporting troubleshooting
  • Education: Employers usually expect college, certificate, apprenticeship, or other role-related training.
  • Licence or certification: Role-specific licensing, registration, certification, or a driver’s licence may be needed in some settings.
This is an independent editorial summary and category set based on role context and visible LMIA patterns. It is not an official Government of Canada NOC description.

See the Government of Canada NOC profile

Salaries are shown in CAD and reflect national hourly wage estimates. Employers may refine expectations, language needs, or licensing requirements during screening.

LMIA Pathway Insight

Read the employer record like a candidate strategist

These LMIA pathway signals are based on Société Québécoise des Infrastructures's visible role mix, latest activity in April to June 2025, and the occupations that stand out most on this employer record: Construction managers, Electricians (except industrial and power system), Industrial instrument technicians and mechanics.

Confidence signal

LMIA validity confidence

Promising confidence
Based on 3 approved positions in the latest visible period and the activity in April to June 2025, this employer reflects a Promising level of international talent hiring activity in Canada.

Employer continuity

Employer consistency insight

Active in 2025
This employer recorded LMIA approvals in multiple years, reflecting continued engagement in Canada’s foreign-worker process.

Occupation mix

Occupation diversity insight

Construction managers, Electricians (except industrial and power system), Industrial instrument technicians and mechanics
The employer has hired under 14 distinct occupations over time, suggesting a broad workforce composition.

Demand pattern

Retention and continuity insight

Fairly Positive
This employer has reapplied for some occupations across multiple years, suggesting recurring demand and workforce continuity.

Work-to-PR alignment

Pathway alignment for candidates

Emerging PR Pathway Fit
Based on this employer’s LMIA track record, location, and pathway fit, the available signals indicate a Emerging PR Pathway Fit level of alignment with employer-driven PR pathways in Canada.
Express Entry Provincial Nominee Program

Final takeaway

How to read this employer page

Visible demand in Quebec
Société Québécoise des Infrastructures shows promising LMIA hiring confidence based on the published employer record. The latest visible activity appears in April to June 2025. Visible sponsoring history includes roles such as Construction managers, Electricians (except industrial and power system), Industrial instrument technicians and mechanics. The current record set points to demand in Quebec. Candidates who align their experience, NOC fit, and resume presentation to this employer profile can build a stronger application path.

Employer footprint

Visible hiring footprint and timeline

Société Québécoise des Infrastructures shows visible activity across 1 provinces and 1 streams. Use this footprint to judge where and how the employer's LMIA-supported hiring has been concentrated.

Visible LMIA activity timeline

Latest visible activity appears in April to June 2025. The timeline below groups approved positions by visible year and quarter so you can see how this employer record is distributed over time.

2025 April to June
3 approved positions
2025 January to March
1 approved positions
2024 July to September
1 approved positions
2024 April to June
12 approved positions
2024 January to March
6 approved positions
2023 October to December
8 approved positions
2023 July to September
6 approved positions

Provinces with visible records

Quebec

Streams represented

High Wage

Related employer records

Only one employer record is visible for this profile.

Searcher questions

Questions candidates usually want answered on an employer page

These answers use Société Québécoise des Infrastructures's visible role mix, location footprint, and LMIA history so candidates can decide faster whether this employer is worth targeting.

Has Société Québécoise des Infrastructures hired foreign workers before?

Société Québécoise des Infrastructures shows a visible LMIA-related employer record with 37 approved positions on record. The latest visible activity appears in April to June 2025.

Which roles stand out most on this employer page?

The strongest visible role signals are Construction managers, Electricians (except industrial and power system), Industrial instrument technicians and mechanics. These are usually the best starting points when deciding whether your current job title and experience fit this employer.

Where is this employer's visible activity concentrated?

Société Québécoise des Infrastructures shows visible demand in Quebec. Stream coverage currently points to High Wage.

How should I use this page before creating a profile?

Start by checking whether your experience aligns to Construction managers, Electricians (except industrial and power system), then review the sponsoring roles and recent timeline. If the fit looks strong, create a profile so your job title and resume can be matched to employers with similar visible demand.

Is this page useful for PR or work permit planning?

Based on this employer’s LMIA track record, location, and pathway fit, the available signals indicate a Emerging PR Pathway Fit level of alignment with employer-driven PR pathways in Canada. Use this page as employer and role research, not as a guarantee of PR or a live job offer.

Market context

Employers like this have hired international talent across related roles

These related-role counts show how Société Québécoise des Infrastructures compares with broader visible LMIA demand in occupations connected to Construction managers, Electricians (except industrial and power system).

Administrative assistants

4,144+ Canadian employers have filed visible LMIA demand.

4,651 total approved positions are represented in related records.

Construction managers

171+ Canadian employers have filed visible LMIA demand.

237 total approved positions are represented in related records.

Administrative officers

2,063+ Canadian employers have filed visible LMIA demand.

2,260 total approved positions are represented in related records.

Computer engineers (except software engineers and designers)

65+ Canadian employers have filed visible LMIA demand.

138 total approved positions are represented in related records.

Electricians (except industrial and power system)

206+ Canadian employers have filed visible LMIA demand.

355 total approved positions are represented in related records.

Information systems specialists

468+ Canadian employers have filed visible LMIA demand.

827 total approved positions are represented in related records.

Candidate roadmap

How to move from employer research to a profile employers can actually review

Employers similar to this one have hired international workers for roles like these.
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Contains information licensed under the Open Government Licence - Canada. VisaTalents adds its own data intelligence and may incorporate data collected from multiple information providers where applicable. Data accuracy, current openings, and employer requirements may vary.