Thank you, Mr. Chair.
My next amendment has to do with the same part of the bill and would make changes to pages 260 and 261.
In both places, the bill states that the period of leave can be no less than one day. The first occurrence appears in lines 28 and 29 on page 260. The provision reads as follows: “The leave of absence may be taken in one or more periods. The employer may require that each period of leave be of not less than one day's duration.” Witnesses told the committee that that made no sense. The first occurrence pertains to family responsibility leave, and the second concerns leave for victims of family violence.
When an employee has a family obligation, they will be required to take a full day of leave. If a situation arises and the person has to take time off for a family responsibility, they will have to take a full day of leave. What's more, since my amendment was defeated, the person will not be paid for that day of leave. They will not be able to take three hours or the afternoon off, for instance. They will absolutely have to take a full day. That makes no sense given the actual day-to-day lives of Canadians. They should instead be entitled to the equivalent of three days of leave. Unfortunately, my amendment to provide for five days of family responsibility leave was defeated, so employees will have access to just three days a year, which they will have to take at least a day at a time. They won't have the option of taking a total number of hours per year equivalent to three days times 7.5 hours.
All my amendment does is remove the sentence after the period in both cases: in subclause 206.6(2) for family responsibility leave, and in subclause 206.7(4) for leave for victims of family violence. Consequently, the subclauses would simply read “The leave of absence may be taken in one or more periods.”
It is not necessary to specify that the leave of absence has to be taken in minimum increments of one day. I think my amendment would address the comments we heard from witnesses. Practically speaking, employees may need to take only one, two, three, or five hours of family responsibility leave at a time, not necessarily an entire day. That makes perfect sense, and the amendment is more than reasonable. It would not change the spirit of the bill. It would simply give employees the option of spreading the leave out over the year by taking it in increments of hours, not full days.