Madam Speaker, I will share my time with my colleague, the member for Rosemont.
It is with a great deal of interest that I take part in the debate on the motion moved by the member of the Conservative Party asking the government to amend the Employment Insurance Act in order to permanently extend the small weeks adjustment projects put in place by the Minister for Human Resources Development in March 1997.
As we know such pilot projects are being tried out in 29 regions. We also know that they will come to an end on November 15.
The Bloc Quebecois supports the Conservative Party's motion. However, if it had been possible, we would have liked to move an amendment asking the government to make the pilot projects a permanent feature in the 54 EI administrative areas, and to address the unfairness in the current Employment Insurance Act, which promotes increased poverty and deprives millions of people from the benefits of economic growth.
We know that a great many people who are not eligible to EI end up too quickly on welfare. Last December, the Bloc Quebecois introduced six bills aimed at improving the lean program the employment insurance system has become.
Bill C-296, introduced by the Bloc Quebecois, dealt among other things with small weeks, and was aimed at extending them to every region. We know that the level of benefits should be determined based on the average of the weeks with the highest earnings, rather than on all the weeks worked, including the small weeks, as is currently done in the 25 areas where the pilot projects are not being tried out.
Thanks to this formula, the cheques for some of the unemployed would not be greatly reduced and those who work very few hours a week would not be penalized.
I would like to give a concrete example. A lady who teaches adults has a 26 week contract, 35 hours a week at $25 an hour. At the end of her contract, she signs a new one for six weeks at the same hourly rate, but for only three hours a week. What would happen? I will show how this lady is penalized.
Under the current legislation, in an area where there is no pilot project, this lady would be entitled to $327 a week, because the last 26 weeks are taken into account, including the six weeks at only three hours a week. So, she is penalized.
Under the plan put forward by the Bloc Quebecois in Bill C-296, this lady would have been entitled to $413 a week, because the small weeks would not have been taken into consideration. Before the 1996 reform, that teacher would have got $448 a week, again because the small weeks did not come into play.
As we can see, the Bloc Quebecois has come up with a balanced solution between the reformed EI system as we know it now and what the old system provided in terms of EI benefits.
Previously, maximum insurable earnings were $815 a week, instead of $750, as is the case today. With the small week pilot project, a person can receive $406 a week, in the same circumstances.
The current Employment Insurance Act will thus penalize this person by $121 a week compared to 1996 levels, by $35 a week compared to the Bloc's proposal and by $42 compared to the Conservative Party's proposal. This illustrates once again that the Bloc Quebecois' approach is balanced, fair and equitable.
We know there are a number of other unfair aspects in the current Employment Insurance Act and the Bloc has condemned several of them since the reform. One of these aspects is the immediate elimination of discrimination against some categories of unemployed on the basis of their so-called presence in the workforce.
We know that a woman who has taken care of her child from birth to age two and who goes back to work will have to work 30% to 117% more hours to be eligible for the same benefits as regular claimants. It depends on the regional unemployment rate.
When the minister says that the reform is helping women and young people, we can see, with figures to back us up—because we also have figures—that women who stay at home more than two years are considered as new entrants in the workforce and have to work 910 hours, according to the regional rate of unemployment, while a regular claimant will have to work between 420 and 700 hours.
If that is what the Minister of Human Resources Development means by adjustment to labour market realities, he is on the wrong track.
There are other situations that are just absurd. For example, in the same region, a woman who worked 420 hours is eligible for EI benefits whereas if she were pregnant, she would have to work 700 hours. Before the reform, a woman had to work 300 hours to be eligible for maternity benefits, and now she has to work 700 hours.
Some say that this reform helps women, but, on the contrary, I say it does not encourage women to leave their jobs, take care of their children for two years and then go back to work. Knowing how difficult it often is to re-enter the work force, a woman will certainly think twice before leaving it.
The EI fund surplus is another irritant. The government is always carrying out studies. I just heard a colleague from the government side say that things must not be rushed, but by not rushing, billions of dollars are being accumulated in the employment insurance fund, at the rate of $6 billion a year, when we know very well that the government is no longer putting a cent into the fund and that it comes from the pockets of the workers.
This is why the Bloc Quebecois has called for a separate fund, one that is administered outside the control of the Minister of Human Resources Development. The auditor general is very clear on this. He says it would not be legal to use contributions for any purpose other than the one set out in the legislation.
What does the government do? It puts the money into the consolidated revenue fund, and we know now that those $20 billion are more or less virtual money. While they are talking about their compassion for the unemployed, they are busy piling up the money and carrying out a reform that tightens up eligibility.
What the minister is not saying is that fewer and fewer people who contribute qualify for benefits. Now, 38% of contributors have access. Since the Liberals came along, eligibility has eroded, and fewer and fewer people are eligible for benefits.
I find it regrettable that $20 billion are being taken away from people in need, with seemingly no concern for what happens to them. Today, we agree with the small weeks. The pilot project put in place in a mad panic by this party because no thought was given to the impacts the reform would have on people. This pilot project was inaugurated in a mad panic because too many people could not qualify for employment insurance.
We want all regions to have access to this, because it is not only the high unemployment regions that can benefit from it. We would like to see everyone able to qualify for employment insurance in other regions which also have a high unemployment rate.