Madam Charette, I am having a hard time reconciling your numbers with other numbers we have heard, as well as with the reality facing people in my riding. You said that less than 9.3% of women were ineligible for EI benefits because they did not have enough hours of insurable employment. All 9.3% must be in my riding, because I receive many calls from women who are ineligible for EI benefits, even though they worked the number of hours required. I have to wonder about this.
You said you use gender-based analysis as a matter of course. Based on that analysis, how were you able to determine that extending benefits by five weeks was the best solution? According to Statistics Canada, only 10% of people make it to the end of their benefits period. We also know that accessing benefits is much more difficult, and once an individual receives benefits, he or she usually finds a job before the end of the benefits period.
What motivated the decision to add five weeks, rather than eliminate the two week waiting period that comes at the beginning? I also wonder about that.
In the case of women who have a maternity leave, the 910 required hours are not taken into account when they file a second claim for benefits. However, people who have cancer, who are ill and have received 15 weeks of benefits because of their illness, if they go back to work and are then laid off, they must absolutely prove that they worked enough hours to access benefits again, despite the fact that they are very vulnerable.
I would like you to address those questions.