First, I want to thank Ms. Gladu and Mrs. Gill very much for their work on this issue. People have been discussing the need for legislative change for a long time. However, this legislative gap has yet to be addressed, and as a result, tens of thousands of Canadians have lost all or a significant portion of their pensions.
For New Democrats, this bill is really about recognizing that it's not just capital investment that deserves to be protected. When workers work for a company, they invest their time, talent, and skill. They do that on a contractual basis with certain kinds of returns that are supposed to be there for them. That's not just their wages; it's other things, including their pension.
I think of what workers pay into the Canada pension plan and employment insurance. They pay that sometimes, if they're fortunate to be in a workplace...not fortunate, but in a workplace where people put in the time and effort to unionize and to negotiate pension plans for themselves and their fellow workers.
They also deserve to see that return on investment that was a matter of contract. It's a sad reflection on Canada that at the moment our laws don't guarantee that return on investment, even as people who are already fortunate enough to have the money to put up for the success of certain kinds of companies do get that protection. We know we can protect these investments. We know that through good law, we can make good on the return on investment.
We need to recognize that capital investment is not the only kind of investment that people make in order to see companies succeed. We need to protect that return for workers just as much as, or more than, we do for shareholders and investors.
That, to me, is what this project is about. It's why I was proud to re-present a bill that an NDP colleague of mine, Scott Duvall, had done a lot of work on in the 42nd and 43rd Parliaments. It's why I was glad to talk to both Ms. Gladu and Madame Gill about their respective efforts on the same file to try to come to a common understanding about how we can move forward.
I am happy to hear that we'll be able to remove certain clauses from the bill, which Marilyn made mention of in her opening remarks, and also add in language around the protection of severance and termination pay, which, as I said, is part of the terms and conditions of employment. People deserve similar protection as other types of investment, when a company is ultimately unsuccessful and has to apply for bankruptcy.
When we talk about the kind of general state of decline for defined benefit pensions that we've seen in Canada now for some time, this is not just an important protection for those who did work under a defined benefit regime and can't go back to work another 30 years now that they're retired. They're 70 years old, and the company has gone bankrupt. They don't have that option. They don't have a diversified portfolio in a way that Ms. Gladu was talking about earlier.
It's also an important part of the strategy to protect defined benefit plans that do exist, because we've seen companies like Stelco, for instance, where these loopholes in Canadian bankruptcy law are used as part of a divestment strategy to be able to relieve the company of its obligations under its defined benefit pension plan.
I'm talking about companies where we've seen a Canadian subsidiary declare bankruptcy. It gives everyone a haircut on their pension. It's actually the American counterpart that then takes over the company, and it does likewise. The Canadian subsidiary steps back in, and every time workers are getting dinged on their pension. It's the same company. It's ultimately the same set of shareholders who are the beneficiaries of these moves, and it's the same workers who continue to see a decline in their pension.
This is not just important from the point of view of trying to protect the value of defined benefit plans that are already there; it's also part of talking about potential risk to the culture of defined benefit plans. I hate to say it, because I've been part of a political movement fighting against it, but the fact is that the trend line has been downward for defined benefit pension plans.
One of the ways companies have already adopted that strategy for independent reasons, and have executed the strategy, has been through the deficiencies of our bankruptcy law. That's why it's so important to protect it. It's why, over time, I see this as part of pushing back against that movement of companies divesting their defined benefit pension obligations.
I want to turn the floor over to you, Marilyn, with the little time that I have remaining, to talk about termination and severance pay, and the importance of protecting that as part of the package that workers go to work for every day.
Thank you.