CBCnews

Self-employed to get EI benefits

Last Updated: Tuesday, November 3, 2009 | 11:39 PM AT

The Conservative government has introduced legislation that will allow the self-employed to opt into the federal employment insurance plan and collect benefits currently available only to wage-earners and salaried workers.

The Fairness for the Self-Employed Act will extend maternity, parental, adoption, medical and compassionate-care benefits to self-employed workers.

"Self-employed Canadians should not have to choose between their family and business responsibilities," Minister of Human Resources Diane Finley told reporters in Toronto on Tuesday. "Extending access to these benefits is the fair and right thing to do."

Self-employed workers can sign up for the plan beginning Jan. 1, 2010, and can start claiming benefits one year later.

Once self-employed workers access EI, they would have to continue paying premiums for as long as they are self-employed.

In response to a reporter's question, Finley said the government expects the plan to be self-financing, though that will depend on how many of Canada's 2.6 million self-employed workers sign up and on their claim rate.

Dale Ripplinger, president of the Canadian Real Estate Association welcomed the move, saying it will address many of the inequities in the EI system and help its 96,000 members across the country balance career and family life.

Extending parental leave to the self-employed was a Conservative campaign promise from the last election. The Conservative platform document for the 2008 election campaign estimated the cost of extending those EI benefits to the self-employed at $147 million.

Women are heavily represented among the self-employed and are a constituency the Conservatives covet, but one that has proved difficult for the party to attract.

In September, the Conservatives survived a Liberal motion of no-confidence when the NDP backed the government to ensure the speedy passage of legislation extending employment insurance benefits.

  •  
 

Video

    Nova Scotia Headlines

    H1N1 clinics coming to Halifax-area schools
    The first school-based H1N1 vaccination clinics will open in the Halifax area next week.
    Fire hall damaged in suspicious blaze
    A suspicious car fire in Kennetcook, N.S., has damaged the fire hall it was parked beside.
    Yarmouth airline grounded after depleting $2M fund
    The only airline flying regularly out of southwestern Nova Scotia is suspending operations.
    Tourism rises slightly in N.S.
    The Nova Scotia government says the number of visitors to the province is expected to jump by one per cent this year compared to 2008.
    Queen to tour Canada in summer
    The Queen and Prince Philip will visit Canada next summer, spending July 1 in the national capital.

    Canada Headlines

    Child who died at airport was 'always smiling': father Video
    The father of the toddler who died Sunday after a fall at Toronto's Pearson International Airport says his family is still trying to cope with an event that "was not supposed to happen."
    Afghan prison concerns known in 2006: MacKay
    The Conservative government was aware of concerns about the state of prisons in Afghanistan in early 2006, prompting it to negotiate a new prisoner transfer agreement, Defence Minister Peter MacKay said Friday.
    Wal-Mart wins at Supreme Court Video
    The Supreme Court of Canada ruled Friday that Wal-Mart Canada Corp. was within its rights when it shut down a store in Jonquière, Que., that had been unionized seven months earlier.
    4 Toronto Humane Society animals euthanized Video
    Four animals inside the Toronto Humane Society's shelter in the east end of the city had to be euthanized after animal cruelty charges were laid against the president and the board of directors at the facility.
    Tories set to introduce HST bill Video
    The federal Conservatives are set to introduce legislation next week that would allow provinces to harmonize the provincial sales tax and federal GST on products and services.

    People who read this also read …

    Top CBCNews.ca Headlines