Just to add you can only count a maximum total hours of 30 hours in any one week. (30 x 52 =1560)Hello,
I would like to know if I'm am eligible for CEC. I have 2 part-time job in the same Noc. My average hours with both stores is 31hr/wk, but when COVID started my hours dipped to 24-26/wk for a few weeks. Can my 1560 hrs be extend beyond 52 weeks and are they looking for consecutive wèek?
I would be very grateful if someone who is knowledgeable about this can advise, thanks.
You can also include T4s if the work experience is in Canada.Thanks for your reply,
I am assuming I need to show all pay stubs for the period and a job letter( same employer). Is there anything else I should include?
I thinkHii
Can someone help me with my hours calculation. It’s getting really complicated for me. So I got my work permit on 12 June 2019. I was working part time with 16 hours per week till 31 july 2019. Then i started one more part time job with 24 hours per week. I was working both jobs one with 16 hours and other one 24 hours till 29 Feb 2020. Then i got laid off on my second job due to COVID. And I was doing only one job with fluctuating hours sometimes 8 or 10 and 12 till 15 Sep. Then I again started my second job on 15 sep and got same hours till present.
Can someone help me to count the hours before 1 Aug 2019 and after 29 feb 2020.
I will appreciate your help.
I am in the same boat with you, quite cobfusedHi there,
In my case, I mostly worked more than 30 hours per week starting in July 2019, but there were some weeks when I worked less than 30 hours. Question is can I count it to add up to my 52 weeks/1,560 hours CEC requirement? Thanks!
That’s fine. As long as it’s stated clearly in your reference letter — hours worked.if I completed my worked hours (1560 hrs) in 54 weeks instead of 52 weeks, is that fine ? in 52 weeks it comes to only 1552 hrs.
Sounds about right.Need help!!
So I was working on B grade part time position from August 2019 to March 2020. During this time my hours were not fixed and I was paid bi-weekly. So there were few weeks where I worked more than 60 hours bi-weekly and few weeks where I worked 40-50 hours bi-weekly. Now going through entire thread it is to my understanding that if I worked bi-weekly 60+ hours I would count it as 2 week of full time experience. And for weeks where I worked anything less than 60 (because it's bi-weekly 30+30) I would all those hours and divide it by 30 and I will get equivalent full time week. Example bi-weekly 1 - 45
Bi-weekly 2- 58
Bi-weekly 3 - 38
Bi-weekly 4 - 40
So to convert this I would add up all the hours 45+58+38+40 = 181 and divide it by 30 = 6.03 Full time experience in weeks.
Please correct me if I'm wrong. Thanks
In my opinion you are taking an approach that is not the correct one.Need help!!
So I was working on B grade part time position from August 2019 to March 2020. During this time my hours were not fixed and I was paid bi-weekly. So there were few weeks where I worked more than 60 hours bi-weekly and few weeks where I worked 40-50 hours bi-weekly. Now going through entire thread it is to my understanding that if I worked bi-weekly 60+ hours I would count it as 2 week of full time experience. And for weeks where I worked anything less than 60 (because it's bi-weekly 30+30) I would all those hours and divide it by 30 and I will get equivalent full time week. Example bi-weekly 1 - 45
Bi-weekly 2- 58
Bi-weekly 3 - 38
Bi-weekly 4 - 40
So to convert this I would add up all the hours 45+58+38+40 = 181 and divide it by 30 = 6.03 Full time experience in weeks.
Please correct me if I'm wrong. Thanks
That is how I was calculating previously but going through this thread I thought it's more important to count weeks of experience than hours in total. And yes I work part-time (ish) from August 2019 to March 2020 and from March to September I worked full time (37 hrs each week). During 8 months of part time that is 32 weeks, I had at least 16 weeks where I worked more than 60 hours and adding that to full time for 26 weeks give me a total of 42 weeks full time. So I essential need just 10 weeks of more full time experience or equivalent of 600 hours in total from the rest 16 weeks of part time experience I have left to count.In my opinion you are taking an approach that is not the correct one.
All you need to do is simply:
Because you won't add more than 60 hours per 2-weeks ( or 30 hours per week), you will necessarily have to have worked at least 52 weeks before you can add your hours to 1560.
- Get all your pay stubs.
- Add the hours in all of them.
- If the hours reported in any paystub are 60 or more, then add 60. For example: Hours =70, then add 60.
- If the hours reported are anything below 60, add the actual # of hours. For example 50h.
- Keep adding the hours, once you have reached or passed 1560, you will have accrued the equivalent of 1 year FT.
In your case you will need for sure more than 52 weeks (26 bi-weekly pay stubs) to accomplish this.
Correction - 10 weeks of full time experience that is equivalent to 300 hours and not 600.That is how I was calculating previously but going through this thread I thought it's more important to count weeks of experience than hours in total. And yes I work part-time (ish) from August 2019 to March 2020 and from March to September I worked full time (37 hrs each week). During 8 months of part time that is 32 weeks, I had at least 16 weeks where I worked more than 60 hours and adding that to full time for 26 weeks give me a total of 42 weeks full time. So I essential need just 10 weeks of more full time experience or equivalent of 600 hours in total from the rest 16 weeks of part time experience I have left to count.