Good morning. My name is Julie Brassard, and I am the executive director of Mouvement Action-Chômage de Charlevoix.
The Mouvement Action-Chômage de Charlevoix was founded in 1977 by members of the community. Every year, our team responds to approximately 2,500 requests for information and support related to the employment insurance program.
Charlevoix is a tourism region where one in three jobs is related to seasonal industry. All our businesses, small and large, in all fields of activity, add seasonal workers to their regular teams to meet the increase in peak season needs.
In January 2008, 3,075 seasonal workers in Charlevoix received employment insurance benefits. As of January 2024, only 2,079 remained. As of February 2024, a third of them had exhausted their benefits before returning to work. Since September, we have received 27 calls from workers who didn't have the required number of hours to be eligible for benefits. However, every spring, employers contact us because they are looking for workers. Since 2008, we've lost 996 seasonal workers, and those who remain are all working. I can confirm that the labour shortage is real and that it will continue to worsen, since most of our seasonal workers are people over 60 years of age and will be leaving for retirement in the near future.
This situation has been going on since July 2000, when a redistribution of the employment insurance administrative regions led to considerable changes in eligibility criteria and the duration of benefit periods. Since then, the unemployment rate has steadily declined in Charlevoix and now stands at 4.7%, with serious consequences. Indeed, since the unemployment rate changes the conditions of access, the number of weeks of benefits payable and the amount the worker can expect, this is a major factor contributing to the increase in poverty among our seasonal workers, who are mostly women. The unemployment rate is recalculated every month, making it unstable and unpredictable. If you have a high unemployment rate, you need fewer hours to qualify and you get more weeks of benefits. If the unemployment rate is lower, they will have to accumulate up to 700 hours to be eligible and will receive only 14 weeks of benefits.
The amount of the benefit will also be influenced by the divisor, which is also based on the unemployment rate. Since our workers don't accumulate enough weeks to meet the criterion of the 22 weeks of work needed for calculations, they are doubly penalized. These are low-wage workers. They don't work full time, as they often work part time at the beginning and end of the season. While they have an average salary of $18 an hour and a number of weeks worked vary between 15 and 20 for the majority, the benefit rate of 55% will still be calculated based on a divisor of 22.
We also have to consider climate change, which disrupts the way the seasons run. The May 1, 2023, flood in Baie-Saint-Paul delayed the start of the season, which resulted in consequences for many workers who were unable to accumulate the 700 hours required to be eligible.
We need to review this system, because it no longer meets the needs of our population and our work reality. When one in three jobs is seasonal, an entire economy suffers. Our reality is incompatible with an unpredictable system whose rules and conditions change depending on changes in an unemployment rate.
Since I took up this position in 2014, I have witnessed several attempts to address the EI black hole. In 2018, Services Québec created the Charlevoix regional round table, of which we were a member. There was a two-pronged project put in place. It was a support measure for seasonal workers and seasonal businesses that made it possible to extend the season through training that provided access to insurable hours. The first year, 26 participants affected by the EI black hole participated, and the following year, only 10 participants. This initiative did not make it possible to avoid the EI black hole.
There have been other attempts. This year, Tourisme Charlevoix launched a project that has been tried by many others before it: sharing employees between two businesses covering two seasons. Few companies have signed up. Only five matches were attempted, and only one was successful. The fact that many workers already have other part-time jobs in the winter or are already on call for their employer in the off-season makes it very difficult to do this kind of matching. For Charlevoix, it is impossible for these workers to live without employment insurance. So there has to be a change.
Thank you for your attention.