Lethbridge Herald

Expectant moms to get COVID-19 help

- Jordan Press THE CANADIAN PRESS – OTTAWA

Pregnant women will receive help from a key COVID-19 emergency-aid program and will be given a way to access federal maternity benefits even if they aren’t working due to the pandemic, says Canada’s employment minister.

Pregnant women who applied for employment insurance at the outset of the pandemic have found they weren’t automatica­lly transferre­d over to the Canada Emergency Response Benefit when it became available earlier this month.

On top of that, many are now worried they won’t work enough hours to qualify for maternity and parental benefits, which are run through the employment insurance regime, when they reach their due dates.

“They’re going to have full access to their maternity and parental entitlemen­ts and they’ll receive the accurate dollar amounts, but it feels like this is taking long because we’re solving problems on a daily basis,” Employment Minister Carla Qualtrough said Friday in an interview.

“They will get what they are entitled to ... because there is not a scenario where we don’t make this right for people.”

Conservati­ve MP Stephanie Kusie, the critic for families, said in a statement that her party looked forward to details on the fix: “Canadians are looking for clarity and leadership during this crisis, not more confusion and delays.”

Since applicatio­ns for the CERB opened earlier this month, there have been 7.12 million unique applicants for the $2,000-a-month benefit, just over two million of whom previously qualified for EI in March. Federal figures posted Friday show $22.4 billion has been paid out through Thursday, out of a program budgeted at $24 billion.

The hurdle for expecting mothers stems from them marking themselves as pregnant on the online EI applicatio­n. That put a flag on their file as a marker for officials that they might change benefit streams, from the CERB to EI, but also meant they weren’t moved to the CERB with other workers at the start of April.

In some cases, the women calling Service Canada have been told they have to apply early for parental benefits, which would mean a return to work months before their infant is a year old.

Mothers-to-be who are eligible for the CERB can receive the emergency help even if they expect to start an EI maternity or parental claim soon. Anyone previously on EI would have their entitlemen­t period paused while on the CERB. The only stipulatio­n for the CERB is that you can’t receive maternity benefits at the same time.

“There are very unique fact patterns that we’re trying to figure out solutions for,” Qualtrough said, pointing to single mothers whose spousal support has dropped due to the pandemic.

During the committee meeting, New Democrat MP Jenny Kwan said many women “cannot get access to support in a dire situation” because the support payments aren’t calculated in lost income needed to access the CERB.

The CERB is among a host of federal initiative­s unveiled in recent weeks to combat the economic fallout from COVID19, with total combined spending of more than $145 billion that is expected to plunge the federal deficit for the year: the parliament­ary budget officer suggested a deficit as high as $184.2 billion this fiscal year, while some private-sector economists foresee a possible $200-billion deficit.

Parliament­ary budget officer Yves Giroux said in a report Friday that a $25-billion loan program for businesses will likely cost federal coffers just over $9.1 billion through a combinatio­n of interest costs, defaults and loan forgivenes­s.

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