Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
Thanks for inviting me to talk about Bill C-44, which is our government's latest initiative to help Canadian workers and their families.
Our government is very proud of the Helping Families in Need Act. It delivers on our 2011 election commitment to provide income support for Canadian families when they need it most.
We can all sympathize with a mother or a father who is stricken with illness while taking care of a baby. And we can only imagine what it's like to watch over a child who is critically ill or to cope with the anguish of a child who is missing or murdered.
Our hearts go out to all of these people.
No matter what jobs we hold or what titles we may have, when tragedy strikes, our highest priority is always to take care of our families. Everything else comes second. That's why our government makes the well-being of families a priority.
Our proposed legislation, Bill C-44, will amend the Employment Insurance Act to facilitate access to sickness benefits for parents should they fall ill while receiving employment insurance parental benefits.
Currently, in order to receive EI sickness benefits, a claimant would have to be available for work, if not for his or her illness or injury. As a result, a claimant would not be able to receive sickness benefits during a claim for parental benefits as he or she is not available for work.
With Bill C-44, our government is proposing to waive this requirement for claimants receiving parental benefits. This new measure, which would come into effect in early 2013, would benefit approximately 6,000 Canadians per year and would be available to insured workers and self-employed workers who have opted into the EI program.
Let me speak to you now of terrible circumstances that no parent should ever have to face, one in which a child becomes critically injured or ill. For many Canadian families, this is a terrible reality. But our government is taking action to make life just a little bit easier in such a challenging time. We've stepped up to support the families of children with life-threatening diseases or injuries to ensure that parents in that situation don't suffer undue financial hardship while caring for a critically ill or injured child.
This new EI benefit will be available for up to 35 weeks and can be shared between parents. The benefit is in addition to the 6 weeks of compassionate care benefits for which parents may also be eligible should their child face a significant risk of death within 26 weeks.
The Helping Families in Need Act will also amend the Canada Labour Code to provide job protection for parents who take a leave of absence from their work while they care for their critically ill child. Children with life-threatening conditions need more than just round-the-clock medical care to get better. They need the comfort of their parents. This new benefit will help to reduce some of the financial pressure that parents experience, as they take time away from work to focus on their family.
The third component of this legislation involves providing support to parents of missing or murdered children—indeed one of the most terrifying experiences a parent could ever possibly endure. In April 2012, the Prime Minister announced a new grant to provide these parents with 35 weeks of income support. Parents who must cope with the death or disappearance of their child as a result of a suspected criminal act are also dealing with unimaginable stressful situations, including dealing with the judiciary system.
Amendments are also being made to the Canada Labour Code for these parents, to provide job protection for those under federal jurisdiction.
My honourable colleague Lisa Raitt will speak to those measures in greater detail.
All of these measures, unfortunately, will be providing assistance during some of the most trying or tragic times that a family could ever endure, yet they also represent our government's steadfast commitment to fulfilling our promises, listening to Canadians, and making life better for hard-working families in this country.
As Dan Demers of the Canadian Cancer Society said:
I think it's critically important that we acknowledge that in the last election, this government made a commitment to parents and families who are caring for children in the most difficult situations we can imagine. And today, we're not only seeing the government take action to fulfill that commitment, but they're moving in this town at lightning speed…and they're exceeding our expectations.
He also said:
These programs will strengthen Canadian families and provide them the flexibility and the security they need to help keep their lives as normal as possible through a very, very difficult time.
I'd now like to turn to my honourable colleague, the Minister of Labour, who will speak to you about job protection for these parents through the Canada Labour Code.