Thank you for the question.
I think it's reducing the hours threshold and making it permanent. As I said, the step toward 420 hours is a good step forward, but it really needs to go down further. That is a very important aspect of it, because as I said, basically, the EI thresholds are still based on weekly hours of 35 hours, and as I was explaining, for most workers, 35 or 40 hours a week is just unheard of and steady employment is also unheard of. I think that's a very important point.
We also need to make sure that we raise the actual amount of income supports for workers, because honestly, when you're in a low-wage job, not even just a minimum wage job, 55% of income is just not sustainable. We need to think about raising the floor of EI income benefits—potentially 60% to 70% would be good. We saw what we did during COVID. We had a floor of $500.
Those are the kinds of things we have to do to make sure that EI is not only there for workers and precarious employment, but that it sustains them. The other aspect of this is also extending the duration of benefits so that it's 50 weeks across the country. That's because you may get EI at the front door, but then you lose at the back door because you haven't been able to get another job in time before your benefits run out. As you know, if you have low qualifying hours, then you have low access to duration. Those things are related. We need a much longer duration.
I will do a shout-out for raising the sickness benefits from 15 weeks to 26 weeks. That's very important. Again, it should be extended to 35 weeks, and I think with COVID—the long-haulers—we're getting all of this evidence to say these are essential changes.
I have one last thing to say about migrant workers as well. They pay into this system like all of us pay into this system, and they are absolutely essential for our economy. We need to make sure that those workers are protected and that EI is there for them as well, because they're contributing to it just like we all are.