Tories promise new parents on leave could earn up to $1,000 without losing EI benefit
OTTAWA — The federal Conservatives promised Monday to let new parents earn up to $1,000 per month without it affecting their maternity or parental leave payments.
The pledge builds on Tory Leader Erin O’Toole’s explicit pitch to women voters a day earlier, when he vowed to boost support for parents following a miscarriage — part of a “compassionate conservatism” the leader has been extolling ahead of the federal election on Sept. 20.
Many lower-income Canadians can’t afford the reduced pay offered by the current federal maternity and parental benefits system, O’Toole told reporters Monday at a field on the outskirts of Ottawa. Employment insurance currently allows parents to receive up to 55 per cent of their earnings, to a maximum of $595 per week.
Vowing to “make our EI system more compassionate,” O’Toole said new parents would be able to supplement those payments with extra earnings from remote or part-time work. Moms and dads could earn $1,000 per month without it affecting their payments, after which each dollar earned would result in a 50 per cent reduction in EI benefits.