Hi, As a new resident I am not sure if maternity benefits and/or child benefits would not be applicable for the initial 3 years as a resident - or is this just employment benefits? Thank you.
Wrong on both counts. A PR, as long as they have sufficient hours of employment is entitled to benefits under EI for both unemployment and maternity leave. EI is an insurance scheme, you pay in when you work and collect when you are not working.mapleleaf2014 said:Hi, As a new resident I am not sure if maternity benefits and/or child benefits would not be applicable for the initial 3 years as a resident - or is this just employment benefits? Thank you.
You don't actually sign up for EI. You gain the right to those payments through working in Canada. Your employer is obligated to withhold a certain percent of your wages for your EI contributions and your eligibility depends on how many hours you have worked that you paid contributions from.mapleleaf2014 said:Ok that's interesting. I assumed that everything that is called a benefit was included in the no claims benefts for PR. What are the benefits that can't be claimed for then?
I read up a bit online and it looks like to get EI or Maternity insurance you have to sign up a year in advance. Do you know if it applies to those with PR?
Thank you.
OK. I would be self-employed though and the only information I could find gave examples for people in different professions who all signed up at least 12 months prior to starting a family.Leon said:You don't actually sign up for EI. You gain the right to those payments through working in Canada. Your employer is obligated to withhold a certain percent of your wages for your EI contributions and your eligibility depends on how many hours you have worked that you paid contributions from.
For maternity or parental benefits, you need to have worked 600 hrs. in the previous 12 months. For regular benefits, it is between 420 and 700 hours you need to have, depending on the unemployment rate in your region.
For self-employed, read this page: http://www.servicecanada.gc.ca/eng/sc/ei/sew/index.shtmlmapleleaf2014 said:OK. I would be self-employed though and the only information I could find gave examples for people in different professions who all signed up at least 12 months prior to starting a family.
I am still not clear as to what benefits PRs are not eligible for. Can you clarify?
that is specifically for WELFARE, NOT Mat leave or EI. As I understand it, as a worker in Canada and a resident, you will be paying into those funds (whether self employed or not), so that in the future you will be able to take it back out. Welfare is different, and i don't think it's somthing that citizens pay into specifically. Rather i think it's a fund provided by the government whether it's collected from taxes or provided by allocation of government funds. Essentially, it's money the government gives a citizen if they can't support themselves.mapleleaf2014 said:I am pretty sure that when I applied for residency my partner had to sign saying that he would pay any benefits back if they were claimed within three years of the residency being awarded. Did I get this wrong?