Ottawa Citizen

Ontario OKs bill to create a provincial pension plan

- KEITH LESLIE

TORONTO Ontario passed legislatio­n Wednesday to create a provincial pension plan for more than three million people who do not have a workplace pension, despite critics’ warnings it amounts to a jobkilling payroll tax.

Workers will be required to contribute 1.9 per cent of their pay to the Ontario Retirement Pension Plan, to a maximum of $1,643 a year, which employers have to match for every employee.

“Over $3.5 billion will be invested in the fund each year,” said Associate Finance Minister Mitzie Hunter. “Members of the plan will be able to have an income stream for life when they retire.”

The mandatory contributi­ons will be phased in over two years, starting with larger companies Jan. 1, 2017, before moving to smaller operations like convenienc­e stores and dry cleaners.

Ontario wants to mirror the Canada Pension Plan as much as possible, and Hunter said the province still would prefer to enhance the CPP instead of creating its own plan. Contributi­ons would be “locked-in” just like CPP contributi­ons, prohibitin­g people from cashing them out before retirement.

However, Hunter could not say when retirees could expect to start receiving benefit payments from the provincial pension plan.

“We’re still actually developing details of the plan,” she said. “So people will be making contributi­ons to the plan, and that’s the beginning.”

Premier Kathleen Wynne has said the province had to create its own retirement plan for the more than two-thirds of Ontario workers who don’t have a pension at work because the federal government refuses to enhance the Canada Pension Plan.

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