The Canada Training Benefit: Empowering Canada's workforce to adapt and prepare for the jobs of tomorrow Français
New benefit will give workers time and money to keep their skills up to date and in demand
TORONTO, May 16, 2019 /CNW/ - The nature of work is changing. To keep our economy strong and growing, Canadians will need the right skills to take on the jobs of tomorrow. The new Canada Training Benefit will give Canadians the support and security they need to advance their careers.
The Honourable Carolyn Bennett, Minister of Crown-Indigenous Relations, was at George Brown College today to highlight the Canada Training Benefit, a new measure that would give Canadian workers a tax credit to help pay for training, provide income support during training, and offer job protection. The benefit would include:
- a $250 per year, non-taxable Canada Training Credit, up to a lifetime limit of $5,000, to help eligible workers cover tuition and training-related costs;
- a new Employment Insurance (EI) Training Support Benefit to provide income support when an individual requires time off work to train;
- new leave provisions under the Canada Labour Code that would allow federally regulated workers to take time away from work to pursue training; and
- an EI Premium Rebate for Small Businesses to help offset the upward pressure on EI premiums.
Over the spring, the Government will engage stakeholders, including provinces and territories, on the final design of the EI Training Support Benefit and associated leave provisions.
Quotes
"Canadians at all stages of their working lives should have the opportunity to learn new skills and build a better future for themselves and their families. The new Canada Training Benefit will help Canada's workforce prepare for the jobs of tomorrow by giving them the time and money to develop their skills throughout their working lives."
– The Honourable Patty Hajdu, Minister of Employment, Workforce Development and Labour
"As we look to the future, with automation and new technologies on the rise, we know that the Canadian workforce will need to be more agile. The Canada Training Benefit will play a significant role in ensuring that workers in this country can keep their skills in demand."
– The Honourable Carolyn Bennett, Minister of Crown-Indigenous Relations
Quick Facts
- The Government of Canada proposes to invest more than $1.7 billion over five years to establish the Canada Training Benefit and an additional $586 million per year.
- The EI Premium Rebate for Small Businesses would be available to employers that pay employer EI premiums equal to or less than $20,000 per year to help offset a possible increase to the EI premium rate resulting from the new benefit.
- The new EI Training Support benefit would give eligible workers up to four weeks of income support – paid at 55 per cent of their average weekly insurable earnings – to help cover the cost of living expenses like mortgage payments and bills while they are on training.
- Approximately 600,000 Canadian workers are expected to claim the Canada Training Credit each year.
- In 2018–19, Saskatchewan received over $76 million through the Labour Market Transfer Agreements.
Associated Links
Budget 2019
Employment Insurance improvements
Backgrounder
CANADA TRAINING BENEFIT
To help working Canadians get the skills they need to succeed in our ever-changing world, Budget 2019 proposed to establish a new Canada Training Benefit that would provide a flexible option for finding the time and the money needed to pursue training, improve skills, and build strong and lasting careers.
The Canada Training Benefit could give workers a refundable tax credit on their income tax and benefit return to help offset tuition costs for training, provide income support during training, and offer job protection so that workers can take the time they need to keep their skills relevant and in-demand. The benefit would include:
- a Canada Training Credit, which is a new refundable tax credit that allows eligible workers to receive $250 per year towards their training amount limit, up to a lifetime limit of $5,000, to help fund future eligible tuition and fees;
- the Employment Insurance (EI) Training Support Benefit that would provide eligible workers with up to four weeks of income support, paid at 55 percent of average weekly insurable earnings, to be taken within a four-year period when they require time off work to train;
- an EI Premium Rebate for Small Businesses that would offset the upward pressure on EI premiums resulting from the new EI Training Support Benefit; and
- new leave provisions under the Canada Labour Code that would allow federally regulated workers to take time away from work to pursue training and receive the EI Training Support Benefit without risk to their job security.
The Canada Training Benefit will be available to millions of Canadian workers who have joined the workforce. It is estimated that approximately 600,000 Canadians will claim the Canada Training Credit each year. The uptake of the EI Training Support Benefit will depend on its final design.
Over the spring, the Government will consult with workers, employers, training providers, and provinces and territories prior to finalizing the design of the new Training Support Benefit and leave provisions.
Canada Training Credit
The Canada Training Credit is a new refundable tax credit to help Canadians with the cost of training fees. Eligible workers—those who have at least $10,000 in earnings for work (including maternity or parental leave benefits) and income below about $150,000—between the ages of 25 and 64 would accumulate a credit balance at a rate of $250 per year, up to a lifetime training amount limit of $5,000. The credit could be used to claim a refundable tax credit for up to half of the eligible tuition and fees for taking a course or enrolling in a training program. An individual's training amount limit would be included in the information the Canada Revenue Agency sends them each year.
Employment Insurance Training Support Benefit
The new EI Training Support Benefit proposes to provide up to four weeks of income support within a four-year period and would be available through the EI program. As announced in Budget 2019, this income support would be paid at 55 percent of a person's average weekly insurable earnings. It aims to help workers cover their living expenses, providing support for ongoing payments such as mortgage payments, electricity bills and other life expenses while on training and without their regular paycheque.
Over the spring, the Government will consult with workers, employers, training providers, and provinces and territories prior to finalizing the design of the new EI Training Support Benefit and leave provisions.
The new EI Training Support Benefit would provide workers with the flexibility to train when it works best for them, within a four-year period (for example, taking three weeks of paid leave in the first year, and the final week in the last year).
LABOUR MARKET TRANSFER AGREEMENTS
The Government of Canada provides funding to provinces and territories to help people prepare for and return to work under two Labour Market Transfer Agreements—the new Workforce Development Agreements and the amended Labour Market Development Agreements.
Workforce Development Agreements
The new Workforce Development Agreements (WDAs) consolidate the Canada Job Fund Agreements, the Labour Market Agreements for Persons with Disabilities (expired in March 2018) and the Targeted Initiative for Older Workers (expired in March 2017). In addition to the $722 million provided annually to provinces and territories under the WDAs, Budget 2017 added $900 million over a period of six years from 2017–18 to 2022–23. The new funding will also support provincial and territorial employment programming for older workers, which was previously supported by the Targeted Initiative for Older Workers.
These agreements provide provinces and territories with the flexibility to respond to the diverse needs of their respective clients, both employers and individuals, which include members of under-represented groups.
Labour Market Development Agreements
Labour Market Development Agreements (LMDAs) are bilateral agreements with each province and territory to design and deliver employment programming similar to Employment Benefits and Support Measures outlined in Part II of the Employment Insurance Act. LMDAs help unemployed Canadians quickly find and return to work. They also ensure a skilled labour force that meets current and emerging needs of employers.
Budget 2017 measures to expand eligibility to help more Canadians access skills training and employment assistance under the amended LMDAs include:
- investing an additional $1.8 billion in LMDAs over six years;
- broadening eligibility for Employment Benefits (for example, skills training, wage subsidies) to include unemployed individuals who have made minimum Employment Insurance premium contributions in at least 5 of the last 10 years;
- expanding eligibility for Employment Assistance Services (for example, employment counselling, job search assistance), previously only available to unemployed Canadians, to also include employed Canadians; and
- increasing flexibility for provinces and territories to support employer-sponsored training under Labour Market Partnerships (for example, to help employers who need to upskill or retrain their workers in order to adjust to technological or structural changes in the economy).
More recently, the Government of Canada announced the following new supports to better support workers in seasonal employment:
- The Government of Canada invested $189 million to implement a new pilot project to provide up to five additional weeks of EI regular benefits to eligible seasonal claimants in 13 targeted EI regions. The additional five weeks of benefits will be available to those who start a benefit period between August 5, 2018, and May 30, 2020. Saskatchewan is not part of the pilot project.
- The Government is also making available $41 million over two years to all provinces and territories through their Labour Market Development Agreements to provide skills training, wage subsidies and employment supports for workers in seasonal industries.
These supports are part of the Budget 2018 commitment to provide $230 million to assist workers in seasonal industries.
SOURCE Employment and Social Development Canada
For media enquiries, please contact: Véronique Simard, Press Secretary, Office of the Honourable Patty Hajdu, P.C., M.P., Minister of Employment, Workforce Development and Labour, [email protected], 819-654-5611; Media Relations Office, Employment and Social Development Canada, 819-994-5559, [email protected]
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