ÐÇ¿Õ´«Ã½

Skip to main content

Election, if it happens, won't stall planned review of EI system, Qualtrough says

Share
Ottawa -

A planned review of the sprawling and antiquated employment insurance system will go ahead even if the country is plunged into a federal election campaign, Employment Minister Carla Qualtrough says.

Qualtrough said consultations will start next month on how the decades-old system can be modernized after its shortcomings were exposed by the COVID-19 pandemic.

But looming over the consultation call is an anticipated federal election that labour and business groups have worried would kibosh the long-sought review.

Speaking to The Canadian Press, Qualtrough said departmental officials will start consultations and keep them going even during an election campaign.

"The machinery of the public service of government can proceed, and my preference is to have really dug in and started this," Qualtrough said.

"And then whatever kind of electoral event happens, we have put that stake in the ground."

Qualtrough said the government doesn't want a review to last for years, saying that the consultations will focus on a few key issues.

Among the issues to be looked at will be who can access the benefit system, whether the value of benefits need to change, and how to pay for any changes given employers and workers fund EI through premiums tied to paycheques.

There are also technical issues that labour and employer groups will have to wrestle with, namely that the system running EI can't be easily programmed to handle changes.

Any changes need to be put into a sequence so not only can the computer system handle it, but also so that there aren't adverse effects on other portions of the EI system, Qualtrough said. She suggested that limitation may cause some tension during consultations.

"It's healthy to have that tension play out during the consultation, so that everybody within the system knows the consequences or the benefits of forging ahead on any one particular idea," she said.

"That's why we're doing this in stages, too, because our system is antiquated and every change we make impacts other changes we make."

The shortcomings in the EI system, long flagged by experts, were put under a harsh light in the early days of the pandemic as some three million jobs were lost during first-wave lockdowns. The government put most of the EI system into hibernation as officials worried that the unprecedented rise in unemployment would drown it.

The system came back online in the fall, and has handled the elevated levels of unemployment seen since.

As of June, the country was about 340,000 jobs, or almost two per cent, below pre-pandemic employment levels seen in February 2020.

The Liberals' April budget forecasted that federal spending would help the labour market get back to pre-pandemic levels by this summer, although it didn't provide a specific month.

Qualtrough said she's confident that the country will reach pre-pandemic employment levels by the end of the summer, although some sectors reliant on travel like tourism operators or high-touch services like restaurants may lag behind other areas of the economy in the jobs rebound.

"I think it's time for optimism in a way that I would have been cautious four months ago," she said.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 21, 2021.

IN DEPTH

Opinion

opinion

opinion Don Martin: Gusher of Liberal spending won't put out the fire in this dumpster

A Hail Mary rehash of the greatest hits from the Trudeau government’s three-week travelling pony-show, the 2024 federal budget takes aim at reversing the party’s popularity plunge in the under-40 set, writes political columnist Don Martin. But will it work before the next election?

opinion

opinion Don Martin: How a beer break may have doomed the carbon tax hike

When the Liberal government chopped a planned beer excise tax hike to two per cent from 4.5 per cent and froze future increases until after the next election, says political columnist Don Martin, it almost guaranteed a similar carbon tax move in the offing.

CTVNews.ca ÐÇ¿Õ´«Ã½

Since she was a young girl growing up in Vancouver, Ginny Lam says her mom Yat Hei Law made it very clear she favoured her son William, because he was her male heir.

An Ontario man says it is 'unfair' to pay a $1,500 insurance surcharge because his four-year-old SUV is at a higher risk of being stolen.

The province's public security minister said he was "shocked" Thursday amid reports that a body believed to be that of a 14-year-old boy was found this week near a Hells Angels hideout near Quebec City.

Local Spotlight

They say a dog is a man’s best friend. In the case of Darren Cropper, from Bonfield, Ont., his three-year-old Siberian husky and golden retriever mix named Bear literally saved his life.

A growing group of brides and wedding photographers from across the province say they have been taken for tens of thousands of dollars by a Barrie, Ont. wedding photographer.

Paleontologists from the Royal B.C. Museum have uncovered "a trove of extraordinary fossils" high in the mountains of northern B.C., the museum announced Thursday.

The search for a missing ancient 28-year-old chocolate donkey ended with a tragic discovery Wednesday.

The Royal Canadian Mounted Police is celebrating an important milestone in the organization's history: 50 years since the first women joined the force.

It's been a whirlwind of joyful events for a northern Ontario couple who just welcomed a baby into their family and won the $70 million Lotto Max jackpot last month.

A Good Samaritan in New Brunswick has replaced a man's stolen bottle cart so he can continue to collect cans and bottles in his Moncton neighbourhood.

David Krumholtz, known for roles like Bernard the Elf in The Santa Clause and physicist Isidor Rabi in Oppenheimer, has spent the latter part of his summer filming horror flick Altar in Winnipeg. He says Winnipeg is the most movie-savvy town he's ever been in.

Edmontonians can count themselves lucky to ever see one tiger salamander, let alone the thousands one local woman says recently descended on her childhood home.

Stay Connected