SUPREME
COURT OF CANADA
Between:
Attorney General
of Canada
Appellant
v.
Attorney General
of Quebec
Respondent
‑ and ‑
Attorney
General of New Brunswick,
Attorney
General of Newfoundland and
Labrador
and Canadian Labour Congress
Interveners
Official English Translation
Coram:
McLachlin C.J. and Binnie, LeBel, Deschamps, Fish, Abella and Charron JJ.
Reasons for
Judgment:
(paras. 1 to 78)
|
Deschamps J. (McLachlin C.J.
and Binnie, LeBel, Fish, Abella and Charron JJ. concurring)
|
______________________________
Reference re Employment Insurance Act (Can.), ss. 22 and
23 , [2005] 2 S.C.R. 669, 2005 SCC 56
Attorney General of Canada Appellant
v.
Attorney General of Quebec Respondent
and
Attorney General of New Brunswick,
Attorney General of Newfoundland and
Labrador and Canadian Labour Congress Interveners
Indexed as: Reference re Employment
Insurance Act (Can.), ss. 22 and 23
Neutral citation: 2005 SCC 56.
File No.: 30187.
2005: January 11; 2005: October 20.
Present: McLachlin C.J. and Binnie, LeBel,
Deschamps, Fish, Abella and Charron JJ.
on appeal from the court of appeal for quebec
Constitutional law — Division of powers —
Unemployment insurance — Maternity benefits and parental benefits — Whether
provisions of federal employment insurance statute relating to maternity
benefits and parental benefits intra vires Parliament — Constitution Act, 1867,
ss. 91 (2A), 92(13) , 92(16) — Employment Insurance Act, S.C. 1996, c. 23,
ss. 22 , 23 .
The government of Quebec submitted questions
concerning the constitutional validity of ss. 22 and 23 of the Employment
Insurance Act to the Court of Appeal. In essence, these provisions allow a
woman who is not working because she is pregnant, and a person who is absent
from the workplace to care for a newborn or an adopted child, to receive
employment insurance benefits. The Court of Appeal issued an opinion to the
effect that ss. 22 and 23 are unconstitutional because the matters to
which they apply are under provincial jurisdiction.
Held: The appeal
should be allowed. Sections 22 and 23 of the Employment Insurance Act
are constitutional.
It was open to Parliament to enact ss. 22 and 23
based on the jurisdiction assigned to it by s. 91 (2A) of the Constitution
Act, 1867 in relation to unemployment insurance. The provision of income
replacement benefits during maternity leave and parental leave does not trench
on the provincial jurisdiction over property and civil rights and may validly
be included in the Employment Insurance Act . [3] [77]
The context in which the provision relating to
maternity benefits was enacted, and its language and effect show that the pith
and substance of the benefits is the replacement of the employment income of
insured women whose earnings are interrupted when they are pregnant. As can be
seen from the context in which the first unemployment insurance legislation was
enacted, Parliament’s intention was to curb the problem of unemployment.
Although many workers, including pregnant women, were originally excluded,
special benefits were instituted, after women had entered the labour market in
large numbers, to compensate for the interruption of their earnings that
resulted from pregnancy. It is quite clear from the text of the provision that
benefits are paid to a woman who loses her employment income because of her
pregnancy if she held insurable employment during the period required by the
Act. Also, the primary effect of the measure is to replace, in part, employment
income. Although the secondary effect is to enable women to prepare for
childbirth, to recover physiologically and to have a period of time to take
care of their families, this secondary effect does not divert the measure from
its purpose or its primary effect; rather, it is a natural consequence of them.
The right to take time off work is not granted in the Employment Insurance
Act ; it derives from other legislation, or from an agreement between the
employer and employee. Support for families and the ability to care for
children are only one of the effects of the measure, and are not its pith and
substance. [26] [29] [33-35]
The provision relating to maternity benefits
represents a valid exercise of the federal jurisdiction over unemployment
insurance. In a case such as this, where a specific power (unemployment
insurance) has been detached from a more general provincial power (property and
civil rights), the specific power cannot be evaluated in relation to the
general power, because any evolution would then be regarded as an
encroachment. Rather, it is necessary to consider the essential elements of
the power and to ascertain whether the impugned measure is consistent with the
natural evolution of that power. In the instant case, the pith and substance
of the maternity benefits is consistent with the essence of the federal
jurisdiction over unemployment insurance, namely the establishment of a public
insurance program that is based on the concept of social risk and the purpose
of which is to preserve workers’ economic security and ensure their re-entry
into the labour market by paying income replacement benefits in the event of an
interruption of employment. The decision to offer women the possibility of
receiving income replacement benefits when they are off work due to pregnancy
is therefore a social policy decision that is not incompatible with the concept
of risk in the realm of insurance. Furthermore, to limit a public
unemployment insurance plan, from a constitutional perspective, to cases in
which contributors are actively seeking employment or are available for
employment would amount to denying its social function. The social nature of
unemployment insurance requires that Parliament be able to adapt the plan to
the new realities of the workplace. An interruption of employment due to
maternity can no longer be regarded as a matter of individual responsibility.
Women’s connection to the labour market is well established, and their
inclusion in the expression “unemployed persons” is as natural an extension as
the extension involving other classes of insured persons who lose their
employment income. [37] [39] [48] [56] [66] [68]
Finally, parental benefits, like maternity benefits,
are in pith and substance a mechanism for providing replacement income when an
interruption of employment occurs as a result of the birth or arrival of a
child. It can be concluded from their pith and substance that Parliament may
rely on the jurisdiction assigned to it under s. 91 (2A) of the Constitution
Act, 1867 . The inclusion of this type of benefits in the unemployment
insurance plan is an extension of the plan that is made necessary by the
equality rights of adoptive parents and natural parents. [73] [75]
Cases Cited
Referred to: Fédération
des producteurs de volailles du Québec v. Pelland,
[2005] 1 S.C.R. 292, 2005 SCC 20; Reference re Same-Sex Marriage, [2004]
3 S.C.R. 698, 2004 SCC 79; Kitkatla Band v. British Columbia (Minister of
Small Business, Tourism and Culture), [2002] 2 S.C.R. 146, 2002 SCC 31; Hodge
v. The Queen (1883), 9 App. Cas. 117; Citizens Insurance Co. of Canada
v. Parsons (1881), 7 App. Cas. 96; Global Securities Corp. v. British
Columbia (Securities Commission), [2000] 1 S.C.R. 494, 2000 SCC 21; General
Motors of Canada Ltd. v. City National Leasing, [1989] 1 S.C.R. 641; Martin
Service Station Ltd. v. Minister of National Revenue, [1977] 2 S.C.R. 996; Saumur
v. City of Quebec, [1953] 2 S.C.R. 299; Attorney-General for Alberta v.
Attorney-General for Canada, [1939] A.C. 117; Hills v. Canada (Attorney
General), [1988] 1 S.C.R. 513; Reference re The Employment and Social
Insurance Act, [1936] S.C.R. 427, aff’d Attorney‑General for
Canada v. Attorney‑General for Ontario, [1937] A.C. 355; Abrahams
v. Attorney General of Canada, [1983] 1 S.C.R. 2; Tétreault‑Gadoury
v. Canada (Employment and Immigration Commission), [1991] 2 S.C.R. 22; Williams
v. Canada, [1992] 1 S.C.R. 877; Bliss v. Attorney General of Canada,
[1979] 1 S.C.R. 183; Brooks v. Canada Safeway Ltd., [1989] 1 S.C.R.
1219; Attorney General of Canada v. Silk, [1983] 1 S.C.R. 335; Dick
v. Deputy Attorney General of Canada, [1980] 2 S.C.R. 243; Schachter v.
Canada, [1988] 3 F.C. 515.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
Act
respecting labour standards, R.S.Q., c. N-1.1,
ss. 81.4, 81.10.
Act to amend the Unemployment
Insurance Act and the Employment and Immigration Department and Commission Act, S.C. 1990, c. 40, s. 14.
Act to amend the Unemployment
Insurance Act, 1971 (No. 3), S.C.
1980-81-82-83, c. 150, s. 5.
Civil Code of Lower Canada, arts. 176, 177.
Constitution Act, 1867, ss. 91 (2A), 92(13) , (16) .
Court of Appeal Reference Act, R.S.Q., c. R-23, s. 1.
Employment and Social Insurance
Act, S.C. 1935, c. 38.
Employment Insurance Act, S.C. 1996, c. 23, ss. 22 , 23 .
National Employment Commission
Act, 1936, S.C. 1936, c. 7, preamble.
Supreme Court Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. S-26, s. 36 .
Unemployment Insurance Act,
1940, S.C. 1940, c. 44, First Schedule, Part
II.
Unemployment Insurance Act,
1971, S.C. 1970-71-72, c. 48, s. 30(1).
Unemployment Insurance
Commission Regulations, 1949, SOR/49-524,
s. 5A [ad. SOR/50-515, Schedule A, s. II].
Authors Cited
Brun, Henri, et Guy Tremblay. Droit
constitutionnel, 4e éd. Cowansville, Qué.: Yvon Blais, 2002.
Campeau, Georges. From UI to
EI: Waging War on the Welfare State. Translated by Richard Howard.
Vancouver: UBC Press, 2005.
Canada. Commission of Inquiry on
Unemployment Insurance. Report of Commission of Inquiry on Unemployment
Insurance. Ottawa: The Commission, 1986.
Canada. Committee of Inquiry into
the Unemployment Insurance Act. Report of the Committee of Inquiry
into the Unemployment Insurance Act. Ottawa: Queen’s Printer, 1962.
Canada. Department of Labour. Unemployment
insurance in the 70's. Ottawa: Employment and Immigration Canada, 1970.
Canada. Employment and
Immigration Canada. Unemployment Insurance in the 1980s. Ottawa:
Employment and Immigration Canada, 1981.
Canada. House of Commons. Standing
Committee on Labour, Manpower and Immigration. Minutes of Proceedings and
Evidence of the Standing Committee on Labour, Manpower and Immigration,
Issue No. 9, December 3, 1970, p. 9 : 28.
Canada. House of Commons. Sub‑committee
on Equality Rights. Equality for All. Ottawa: Queen’s Printer, 1985.
Canada. Report of the Study
for Updating the Unemployment Insurance Programme. Ottawa: Queen’s
Printer, 1968.
Canada. Royal Commission on
Dominion-Provincial Relations. Report of the Royal Commission on Dominion‑Provincial
Relations, vol. II. Ottawa: Queen’s Printer, 1940.
Canada. Royal Commission on the
Status of Women in Canada. Report of the Royal Commission on the Status of
Women in Canada. Ottawa: The Commision, 1970.
Frémont, Jacques. “Assurance-chômage,
maternité et adoption: les récentes modifications et leur validité” (1982-83),
17 R.J.T. 497.
Issalys, Pierre, et Gaylord
Watkins. Unemployment Insurance Benefits: A Study of Administrative
Procedure in the Unemployment Insurance Commission. Study prepared for the
Law Reform Commission of Canada. Ottawa: Law Reform Commission of Canada,
1977.
Ledoux, Simon. L’influence du
droit constitutionnel dans l’émergence et l’évolution du droit aux prestations
de maternité, d’adoption et parentales au sein de la Loi sur
l’assurance-chômage. Montréal: Faculté des études supérieures, Université
de Montréal, octobre 1991.
Merriam‑Webster’s
Collegiate Dictionary, 10th ed. Springfield,
Mass.: Merriam‑Webster Inc., 1994, “unemployment insurance”.
Nouveau Petit Robert:
Dictionnaire alphabétique et analogique de la langue française. Paris: Dictionnaires Le Robert, 2003, “chômage”, “chômé”,
“chômeur”.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Quebec Court of Appeal
(Beauregard, Pelletier and Morin JJ.A.), [2004] R.J.Q. 399, 245 D.L.R.
(4th) 515, 31 C.C.E.L. (3d) 167, [2004] CLLC ¶240-004, [2004] Q.J. No. 277
(QL), on a reference re the constitutionality of ss. 22 and 23 of the Employment
Insurance Act . Appeal allowed.
Claude Joyal and René
Leblanc, for the appellant.
Dominique Rousseau and Pierre
Christian Labeau, for the respondent.
Written submissions only by Gaétan Migneault,
for the intervener the Attorney General of New Brunswick.
Written submissions only by Barbara Barrowman,
for the intervener the Attorney General of Newfoundland and Labrador.
Steven M. Barrett and Charlene
Wiseman, for the intervener the Canadian Labour Congress.
English version of the judgment of the Court delivered
by
1
Deschamps J. — Does
Parliament have the constitutional authority to grant maternity benefits and
parental benefits to individuals who take time off work to give birth to or
care for a child?
2
In response to an application by the government of Quebec for an opinion
under the Court of Appeal Reference Act, R.S.Q., c. R‑23,
s. 1, the Court of Appeal found ss. 22 and 23 of the Employment
Insurance Act, S.C. 1996, c. 23 (“EIA ”), which provide for the
payment of benefits during maternity leave and parental leave, to be
unconstitutional. (These provisions are reproduced in the Appendix.) In the
opinion of the Court of Appeal, the matters to which those provisions apply are
under provincial jurisdiction.
3
The Attorney General of Canada appealed to this Court pursuant to
s. 36 of the Supreme Court Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. S‑26 .
For the reasons set out below, I am of the opinion that it was open to
Parliament to enact ss. 22 and 23 EIA based on the jurisdiction assigned
to it by s. 91 (2A) of the Constitution Act, 1867 in relation to
unemployment insurance.
1. Constitutional Questions and Positions
of the Parties
4
The Chief Justice stated the constitutional questions in the same way as
did the Government of Quebec in its order in council No. 244‑2002,
by which it sought the reference:
1. Does s. 22 of the Employment
Insurance Act encroach upon provincial legislative competence and, more
particularly, provincial legislative competence over property and civil rights
and matters of a merely local or private nature under ss. 92(13) and
92(16) of the Constitution Act, 1867 ?
2. Does s. 23 of the Employment
Insurance Act encroach upon provincial legislative competence and, more
particularly, provincial legislative competence over property and civil rights
and matters of a merely local or private nature under ss. 92(13) and
92(16) of the Constitution Act, 1867 ?
3. Is s. 22 of the Employment Insurance
Act ultra vires the Parliament of Canada and, more particularly,
does it exceed the Parliament of Canada’s legislative competence over
unemployment insurance under s. 91 (2A) of the Constitution Act, 1867 ?
4. Is s. 23 of the Employment Insurance
Act ultra vires the Parliament of Canada and, more particularly,
does it exceed the Parliament of Canada’s legislative competence over
unemployment insurance under s. 91 (2A) of the Constitution Act, 1867 ?
5
The text of the impugned provisions is appended to these reasons.
In essence, the provisions allow a woman who is not working because she is
pregnant, and a person who is absent from the workplace to care for a newborn
or an adopted child, to receive employment insurance benefits.
6
The Attorney General of Quebec argues that [translation] “the purpose of [maternity benefits and
parental] benefits is to support families and to help parents care for their
child when the child is born or adopted, in a context in which both the labour
market and the social realities that stem from it are in a state of flux”
(respondent’s factum, at para. 20). From this perspective, the benefits
in issue are, in pith and substance, a social security and assistance measure
that trenches on the province’s jurisdiction over property and civil rights or
over matters of a purely local nature under s. 92(13) and (16) of the Constitution
Act, 1867 . In the submission of the Attorney General of Quebec, the purpose
of the benefits is different from the purpose of the EIA , which is to establish
a plan for insurance against the risk of unemployment.
7
The Attorney General of Canada submits that [translation] “the essential characteristic of . . .
[maternity benefits and parental] benefits is that they provide temporary
income for pregnant women or parents who have paid premiums and held insurable
employment for the required number of hours and have lost their employment
income because of a pregnancy or in order to care for a child” (appellant’s
factum, at para. 32). In the submission of the Attorney General of
Canada, neither the purpose nor the effect of the provisions is to create a
plan for maternity leave or parental leave.
2. Analysis
2.1 Principles of
Interpretation
8
It is rare that all the subjects dealt with in a statute fall entirely
under a single head of power. As a result, disputes relating to the division
of powers arise frequently. Because a decision regarding the scope of the
powers assigned by the Constitution Act, 1867 has undeniable social and
political consequences, the Court approaches the task assigned to it by the law
with considerable circumspection. The Court has developed an analytical
framework to guide it in making its decision. It must first seek to determine
the pith and substance, or dominant characteristic, of the statute or provision
and then identify the head of power to which that characteristic is most
closely related: Fédération des producteurs de volailles du Québec v.
Pelland, [2005] 1 S.C.R. 292, 2005 SCC 20; Reference
re Same‑Sex Marriage, [2004] 3 S.C.R. 698,
2004 SCC 79; Kitkatla Band v. British Columbia (Minister of Small
Business, Tourism and Culture), [2002] 2 S.C.R. 146,
2002 SCC 31. Since each level of government may legislate in
relation to the matters within its jurisdiction, it did not take the Privy
Council long to recognize that the classes set out in ss. 91 and 92 of the
Constitution Act, 1867 are not watertight compartments, and to set forth
the “double aspect” doctrine: Hodge v. The Queen (1883),
9 App. Cas. 117 (P.C.), at p. 130, and Citizens
Insurance Co. of Canada v. Parsons (1881), 7 App. Cas. 96
(P.C.), at pp. 107‑8 and 116‑17. The power of one level of
government to legislate in relation to one aspect of a matter takes nothing
away from the power of the other level to control another aspect within its own
jurisdiction. If, however, the statute or provision intrudes into a field of
jurisdiction that does not belong to the authority that enacted it, the court
must determine whether it is nonetheless valid because it is part of a valid
legislative scheme and is sufficiently integrated into that scheme: Kitkatla,
at para. 58; Global Securities Corp. v. British Columbia
(Securities Commission), [2000] 1 S.C.R. 494, 2000 SCC 21;
General Motors of Canada Ltd. v. City National Leasing, [1989]
1 S.C.R. 641.
9
At the first stage of the analysis, in order to identify the head of
power, the Court takes a progressive approach to ensure that Confederation can
be adapted to new social realities. The Court has on numerous occasions cited
the “living tree” metaphor, and we need not revisit it here: Reference re
Same‑Sex Marriage, at para. 29. While the debates or
correspondence relating to the constitutional amendment are relevant to the
analysis as regards the context, they are not conclusive as to the precise
scope of the legislative competence. They reflect, to a large extent, the society
of the day, whereas the competence is essentially dynamic: Martin Service
Station Ltd. v. Minister of National Revenue, [1977] 2 S.C.R. 996, at
p. 1006. In giving them predominant weight, the Quebec Court of Appeal
adopted an original intent approach to interpreting the Constitution rather
than the progressive approach the Court has taken for a number of years.
10
A progressive interpretation cannot, however, be used to justify
Parliament in encroaching on a field of provincial jurisdiction. To derive the
evolution of constitutional powers from the structure of Canada is delicate, as
what that structure is will often depend on a given court’s view of what
federalism is. What are regarded as the characteristic features of federalism
may vary from one judge to another, and will be based on political rather than
legal notions. The task of maintaining the balance between federal and
provincial powers falls primarily to governments. If an issue comes before a
court, the court must refer to the framers’ description of the power in order
to identify its essential components, and must be guided by the way in which
courts have interpreted the power in the past. In this area, the meaning of
the words used may be adapted to modern‑day realities, in a manner
consistent with the separation of powers of the executive, legislative and
judicial branches.
11
Some heads that set forth narrow powers leave little room for
interpretation. Other, broader, heads result in legislation that can have
several aspects.
12
In the instant case, the Attorney General of Quebec does not dispute
that the EIA considered as a whole, or more specifically the regular benefits,
come within Parliament’s jurisdiction over unemployment insurance
(s. 91 (2A) of the Constitution Act, 1867 ). The only issue is the
constitutionality of maternity benefits and parental benefits.
13
Although four separate constitutional questions were stated, a single
approach will apply to the entire analysis. It is therefore important to begin
by determining what the pith and substance or dominant characteristic of the
impugned provisions is before identifying the head of power to which the matter
relates.
14
The earliest parental benefits resulted from an extension of the
maternity benefits that had been adopted more than ten years earlier. I must
begin with an analysis of maternity benefits. The determination of the pith
and substance of maternity benefits will necessarily have an impact on the
determination of the pith and substance of parental benefits.
2.2 Pith and
Substance of Maternity Benefits
15
The pith and substance or essential characteristic of a provision may be
revealed by the provision’s purpose or effects: Kitkatla, at
para. 53. The purpose of a provision is the goal pursued by Parliament in
enacting it. To consider the effect of a provision is to examine its practical
or legal consequences: Saumur v. City of Quebec, [1953]
2 S.C.R. 299; Attorney‑General for Alberta v. Attorney‑General
for Canada, [1939] A.C. 117 (P.C.). These two tests for determining
pith and substance, namely purpose and effect, will be examined in turn.
2.2.1 Purpose of
Maternity Benefits
16
The purpose of a provision may be identified from its context or be set
out in the enactment itself. To identify the purpose, it is often helpful to
identify the problem Parliament was seeking to remedy. The context in which a
statute is enacted thus often provides information that is relevant to the
review of the provision. I will begin the analysis with the Unemployment
Insurance Act, 1940, S.C. 1940, c. 44 (“UIA, 1940”), which did
not provide for maternity benefits, before examining the context in which
maternity benefits were introduced, and then the text of the impugned
provision.
2.2.1.1 Context in
Which the UIA, 1940 Was Enacted
17
In the late 1930s, Parliament considered unemployment to be the most
urgent national problem: National Employment Commission Act, 1936,
S.C. 1936, c. 7, preamble, and Hills v. Canada (Attorney General),
[1988] 1 S.C.R. 513, at p. 534. From this perspective, it
enacted the first unemployment insurance legislation: Employment
and Social Insurance Act, S.C. 1935, c. 38. However, that Act
was declared to be unconstitutional because it related to a matter within the
competence of the provinces: Reference re The Employment and
Social Insurance Act, [1936] S.C.R. 427, aff’d Attorney-General for
Canada v. Attorney-General for Ontario, [1937] A.C. 355 (P.C.). In
1940, an amendment to the Constitution Act, 1867 gave Parliament
jurisdiction over unemployment insurance. The UIA, 1940 was then enacted. It
essentially restated the provisions of the Employment and Social Insurance
Act that had been declared unconstitutional a few years earlier. It
provided for the payment of benefits to unemployed persons who were capable of
and available for work, but unable to find employment.
18
Over the years, numerous amendments were made to the original Act,
generally to expand qualifying conditions, increase benefits and eliminate
inequities, but the Court found in 1988 that the basic thrust had remained
constant: Hills, at p. 535. The amendments were designed. In Abrahams
v. Attorney General of Canada, [1983] 1 S.C.R. 2, at p. 10,
Wilson J. said that the overall purpose of the Act was to make benefits
available to the unemployed. In Tétreault‑Gadoury v. Canada
(Employment and Immigration Commission), [1991] 2 S.C.R. 22, at
p. 41, La Forest J., quoting the words of Lacombe J., who
was on the panel of the Federal Court of Appeal in that case, described the
purpose of the Unemployment Insurance Act, 1971, which seems no
different from the purpose of the current Act, as follows:
. . . to create a social insurance plan to compensate
unemployed workers for loss of income from their employment and to provide them
with economic and social security for a time, thus assisting them in returning
to the labour market.
In Williams
v. Canada, [1992] 1 S.C.R. 877, Gonthier J. added that the
purpose behind unemployment insurance benefits
looks to the past, present and future. Benefits are contingent on
qualifying employment in the past. They are meant to provide income and
security for the present, in lieu of the employment income which has been
lost. However, the benefits also look to the future, enabling the recipient to
find a new job without hardship and with a sense of security. [p. 895]
19
The first express provisions regarding women attest to the social mores
of the day: women were expected to be supported by their husbands, and to stop
working after they were married. A regulatory provision disqualified women for
a period of two years after they were married, unless they met a long series of
conditions: Unemployment Insurance Commission Regulations, 1949, SOR/49‑524,
s. 5A (ad. SOR/50‑515, Schedule A, s. II). It is worth
noting that in 1950, women in Quebec could neither contract (art. 177 of
the Civil Code of Lower Canada) nor appear in judicial proceedings
(art. 176) without their husbands’ consent or assistance. Very little value
was placed in women’s work. In a report recommending that the eligibility
criteria for pregnant women and mothers of young children be made more
restrictive, the following statement was made:
By reason of the ability of some married women who
are not the sole support of their household to work in industry or not work, as
they choose, they have an unique ability to move into and out of the labour
force at will.
(Report of the Committee of Inquiry into the Unemployment Insurance
Act (November 1962) (Gill Report), at p. 133)
While working
was not exactly regarded as a whim for a woman whose husband was working, it
was considered to be optional and unusual at the time. From this perspective,
it is easy to understand why women’s claims for benefits were looked on as
suspect.
2.2.1.2 Context in
Which Maternity Benefits Were Adopted
20
By the 1960s, profound changes were under way that would have a dramatic
impact on Canadian society. Technological developments, the increasing
incidence of part‑time work and the entry of women into the labour market
in large numbers prompted public discussion about the new challenges that were
now an inherent part of the labour market. Despite this evolution of the
labour market, some categories of employment, such as hospital workers,
teachers and federal and provincial public servants, were excluded from the
plan. Economic insecurity was no longer the exclusive preserve of the most
impoverished members of society. On the question of how women were treated, the
Report of the Study for Updating the Unemployment Insurance Programme (1968)
(Cousineau Report), which was published only six years after the
Gill Report, observed (at p. 28):
The Labour Force Participation Rate of married women between 20 and 65
grew from 22.5% in 1961 to 30.5% in 1967. This is due to a number of factors
which we cannot explore here but the consequence of such an increased labour
force participation of the females is to render the procedures discriminating
against women in the operations of the present system, most objectionable. It
has been possible up to now to postulate a tenuous attachment to the labour
force on the part of married women and their lower “registered” unemployment
rate would seem to support the view that married women exit from labour force
activities in some substantial proportion when they become unemployed.
However, there are reasons to believe that “women become more firmly attached
to the labour force”. Consequently, there will be a need to adapt the unemployment
compensation system to deal with it.
21
The government came to understand that a number of provisions had
become anachronistic. The UIA, 1940 was completely revised. In the White
Paper entitled Unemployment Insurance in the 70’s (1970), at pp. 19 and 22, the proposed maternity benefits were
described as follows:
Under the existing legislation, an
insured person is entitled to benefits (1) if he has experienced an
interruption of earnings and is therefore unemployed, (2) if he is capable
and available for work, and (3) if he is unable to find suitable
employment.
. . .
The proposed plan retains the
three main conditions for eligibility listed above. However, it expands
interruption of earnings to include maternity, retirement and
sickness. . . .
. . .
The new special benefits remove
the anomalies from the present Act concerning these three groups and provide
them with benefits based on a realistic appraisal of what their particular
interruption of earnings means in the context of the work force of today.
22
The report of the Standing Committee on Labour, Manpower and Immigration,
which was tabled after the White Paper was considered, also contains comments
regarding the purpose of the new maternity and sickness benefits (Minutes of
Proceedings and Evidence of the Standing Committee on Labour, Manpower and
Immigration, Issue No. 9, December 3, 1970, at
p. 9 : 28):
These additional benefits represent an adjustment
in the economic security system to recognize the contingencies generated by a
world in which women are a large portion of the labour force and in which a
major segment of the population has no protection against interruption of
earnings due to sickness.
23
As is apparent from this brief historical overview, the fact that women
were initially discriminated against can be attributed primarily to the fact
that they were not regarded as full participants in the labour market. The
entry of large numbers of women into the labour market led to an awareness of
their role and of the very real loss of income they suffered when their work
was interrupted as a result of pregnancy. This is the context in which
maternity benefits were adopted: Unemployment Insurance Act, 1971,
S.C. 1970‑71‑72, c. 48 (“UIA, 1971”), s. 30(1).
24
The purpose of the extension was to give women who had contributed to
the plan the right to receive income replacement benefits. The new
benefits were intended to provide pregnant women with economic and social
security on a temporary basis while at the same time helping them to return to
the labour market. In addition to the purely economic income replacement
aspect, maternity benefits, like regular benefits, would ensure continued
employability and reintegration into the labour market.
2.2.1.3 Text of the
Provision
25
The text of the provision may sometimes include a clear statement of
Parliament’s purpose. In the case at bar, the provision, stripped of its technical
aspects, reads as follows:
(1) [B]enefits are payable to a . . .
claimant [who has 600 or more hours of insurable employment in her qualifying
period and] who proves her pregnancy [even if she cannot prove that she was
capable of or available for work].
. . .
(3) Where . . . any allowances,
money or other benefits are payable to the claimant for that pregnancy under a
provincial law, the benefits payable to the claimant under this Act shall be
reduced or eliminated as prescribed.
26
It can be seen from the text that benefits are paid to a woman who loses
her employment income because of her pregnancy if she held insurable employment
during the period required by the EIA . The primary purpose is to provide women
in this position with income replacement benefits.
2.2.2 Effect of the Provision
27
A measure may have effects that go beyond the initial aim. Those
effects can be used to assess its constitutional validity. For instance, in Saumur,
legislation relating to the administration of streets was held to be
unconstitutional because its preponderant effect showed that it was operating
as a censorship mechanism. Thus, the effect of the law cannot be disregarded.
28
In the instant case, the effect of the provision is to enable insured
pregnant women to have access to financial resources at a time when they are
not receiving their employment income.
29
However, these resources also make it possible for them to take time off
work for physiological reasons associated with their pregnancies, and to take
care of their families for longer periods than if they were compelled to return
to work early because they were impecunious. The primary effect is
therefore to replace, in part, these women’s employment income, but the
secondary effect is to enable them to prepare for childbirth, to recover
physiologically and to have a period of time to take care of their families.
30
The broadening of maternity benefits put the emphasis on the function of
replacing income so that women could care for their children. When the UIA,
1971 was enacted, s. 30(1) provided for the payment of benefits during a
15‑week period straddling the delivery date. The fact that benefits
would be paid only for the weeks on either side of that date suggests a
connection between the benefits and the physical limitations associated with
pregnancy. There are a number of sources in which it is argued that at the
time when maternity benefits were introduced, the principal justification for
the recommendations in favour of adopting such a plan was the mother’s physical
inability to work during the period before and after the birth of the
child: J. Frémont, “Assurance‑chômage, maternité et
adoption: les récentes modifications et leur validité” (1982‑83),
17 R.J.T. 497, at p. 503; P. Issalys and G. Watkins, Unemployment
Insurance Benefits: A Study of Administrative Procedure in the Unemployment
Insurance Commission (1977), at p. 11; Employment and Immigration
Canada, Unemployment Insurance in the 1980s (1981), at p. 67;
Canada, Report of the Royal Commission on the Status of Women in Canada
(1970), at p. 84. In Bliss v. Attorney General of Canada, [1979]
1 S.C.R. 183, at p. 190, Ritchie J. quoted the following
comment by Collier J., who was sitting as an Umpire:
I do not know the purpose of the legislators in
injecting s. 46 into the 1971 legislation. It was suggested that,
pre‑1971, there was an assumption that women eight weeks before giving
birth and for six weeks after, were, generally speaking, not capable of nor
available for work . . . .
31
However, a look at how these benefits have been used over the years
reveals that the weeks women chose to be absent were based on the childcare
function rather than on a real inability to work caused by physical
incapacity: report of the Parliamentary Committee on Equality Rights, Equality
for All (1985) (Boyer Report), ch. 2, at p. 10. In fact, there
are few people who would still venture to say that, other than in exceptional
cases, women are incapable of working as a result of being pregnant, although it
is recognized that they are physically unable to work during a brief period
before and after the delivery date.
32
The flexibility introduced into the rules, which allow women to choose
the weeks when they receive benefits, shows that the function of replacing
income during the period when mothers are caring for their children has become
more important than it was when the original provisions were enacted. It would
not be possible to observe this accentuated secondary effect, however, if women
were not entitled to receive income replacement benefits in the first place.
The secondary effect is therefore not unrelated to the purpose of the provision
and does not pervert the intention behind it.
33
Parliament’s intention is to replace interrupted earnings, and that is
the primary effect of the measure. The fact that the primary effect
corresponds to the actual purpose is neither conclusive nor unusual. If
the effect were not consistent with the purpose, the legislation would be
problematic. An analysis of the effect becomes informative if the secondary
effects show that the legislation has been diverted from its stated goal. That
is not the case here. While women can receive income replacement benefits,
they may do so only when they are absent from work due to pregnancy. The right
to take time off work is not granted in the EIA ; it derives from other
legislation, or from an agreement between the employer and employee. The
secondary effect therefore does not divert the measure from its purpose or its
primary effect; rather, it is a natural consequence of them.
2.2.3 Conclusion Regarding the Provision’s
Pith and Substance
34
As can be seen from the context in which the first unemployment
insurance legislation was enacted, Parliament’s intention was to curb the
problem of unemployment. Benefit amounts were not very high, and many workers,
including pregnant women, were excluded. After women entered the labour market
in large numbers, special benefits were instituted to compensate for the
interruption of their earnings that resulted from pregnancy. The context in
which the provision was enacted, and its language and effect, bring to light
the pith and substance, or essential characteristic, of the
benefits: they replace the employment income of insured women whose
earnings are interrupted when they are pregnant.
35
The argument of the Attorney General of Quebec, that the purpose of
maternity benefits is to support families and to enable women to care for their
children at the time of birth, cannot be accepted. No period of leave is
granted by the EIA . Maternity leave is governed by other legislation or by
arrangements between employers and employees. Although support for families
and the ability to care for children may be one of the effects of the measure,
that is not its pith and substance. The fundamental objective of the maternity
benefits plan is to protect the workers’ incomes from the time when they lose
or cease to hold their employment to the time when they return to the labour
market.
2.3 Identification of the Head of Power
36
Once the pith and substance of a provision has been determined, the head
of power to which the pith and substance relates must be identified. The
Attorney General of Quebec contends that the provision falls within Quebec’s
jurisdiction over social matters, because of its connection with property and
civil rights and matters of a merely local or private nature (ss. 92 (13)
and 92(16) of the Constitution Act, 1867 ). The Attorney General of
Canada relies on Parliament’s jurisdiction over unemployment insurance. In
order to understand the context in which the question arises, it will be
helpful to review how Parliament came to be given jurisdiction in relation to
unemployment insurance. Although the context is not conclusive, this review
will assist in identifying the essential elements that may or must be adapted
to contemporary needs. I will then analyse the objections raised by the
Attorney General of Quebec, who contends that the provisions are inconsistent
with the concepts of insurance and unemployment.
2.3.1 Background
37
When the Privy Council declared the Employment and Social Insurance
Act to be unconstitutional, there was no doubt that, prima facie,
measures relating to insurance, and in particular measures relating to contracts
of employment, were in relation to property and civil rights and were within
the exclusive competence of the provincial legislatures:
There can be no doubt that, prima facie, provisions
as to insurance of this kind, especially where they affect the contract of
employment, fall within the class of property and civil rights in the Province,
and would be within the exclusive competence of the Provincial Legislature.
. . .
.
. .
In the present case, their Lordships agree with the majority of the
Supreme Court in holding that in pith and substance this Act is an insurance
Act affecting the civil rights of employers and employed in each Province, and
as such is invalid.
(Attorney-General for Canada v. Attorney-General for Ontario, at
pp. 365 and 367)
Because the
UIA, 1940 essentially reiterated the provisions of the Employment and Social
Insurance Act, it cannot be denied that it affected contracts of employment
or insurance relating to those contracts. This means that when the
Constitution was amended, a portion of the jurisdiction over property and civil
rights was detached so that the aspects relating to unemployment insurance
could be assigned to Parliament.
38
There can be no doubt that a public unemployment insurance plan, in
addition to the fact that it concerns insurance relating to contracts of
employment, is also a social measure. Characterizing it in this way does not
mean, however, that it can be associated exclusively with any one head of
power. The term “social measure” has a number of aspects that may be
associated just as validly with property and civil rights as with unemployment
insurance. For instance, no one would deny that employment insurance benefits
paid to workers who are laid off as a result of bankruptcy are in the nature of
unemployment insurance. The measure, which affects property and civil rights,
is undeniably social in nature, but it is also in the nature of unemployment
insurance. To begin the analysis by classifying the maternity benefits
provision as a social measure and to conclude from this that it is a matter
under provincial jurisdiction is tantamount to evading a review of the scope of
the constitutional amendment. The question that must be asked in order to
determine the head of power to which maternity benefits relate is whether the
provision, in pith and substance, falls within the jurisdiction assigned by the
constitutional amendment.
39
The Attorney General of Quebec submits that the jurisdiction over
unemployment insurance is limited by the parameters defined in the early
legislation. Under those Acts, to be entitled to benefits, insured persons had
to have lost their employment involuntarily, and had to be capable of and
available for work. In so arguing, the Attorney General of Quebec equates the
field of jurisdiction assigned by s. 91 (2A) of the Constitution Act,
1867 to the initial exercise of the federal power. This approach is
inappropriate in more than one respect, the most obvious being that the
eligibility requirements established in the scheme of the UIA, 1940 may be
modified, provided that the scheme still represents a valid exercise of the
jurisdiction over unemployment insurance. Thus, no one would think of
questioning the right to modify the eligibility requirements to calculate
insurable periods in hours rather than weeks. Such a modification would
plainly make the scheme more accessible to part‑time workers, but it
would in no way change the fundamental nature of unemployment insurance. The
question is therefore not the way in which Parliament initially exercised its
jurisdiction, but the scope of its jurisdiction over unemployment insurance.
40
While the views of the framers are not conclusive where constitutional
interpretation is concerned, the context in which the amendment was made is
nonetheless relevant. If the objectives of the framers are taken as a starting
point, it will be easier to determine the scope of the jurisdiction that was transferred,
and then to determine how it may be adapted to contemporary realities.
2.3.2 Circumstances of the Transfer of
Jurisdiction
41
In a letter sent to each of the provincial premiers on November 5,
1937, then Prime Minister W. L. Mackenzie King asked whether
their provinces would agree to jurisdiction over unemployment insurance being
assigned to Parliament. The letter contains an outline of the justification
cited by the federal government at that time:
My dear Premier:
My colleagues and I are convinced that a national
system of unemployment insurance would contribute materially to individual
security and industrial stability throughout Canada, and would assist in
mitigating the distress incident to any recurrence of widespread unemployment.
A strong recommendation with respect to national
control of employment offices, based upon a full investigation of the
unemployment situation throughout the Dominion, has been submitted to the
government by the National Employment Commission. We share the opinion that a
national employment service within federal jurisdiction is a necessary
complement of any plan of national unemployment insurance.
On May 13, 1940, Quebec agreed to the federal request.
42
The Prime Minister’s letter highlights two pieces of information that
are relevant to our analysis. First, it had become important not only to curb
the destitution caused by unemployment, but also to put an end to unemployment
by organizing a return to work. Employment offices were seen as a protective measure
that was just as important as the payment of benefits.
43
In essence, the purpose of the transfer of jurisdiction was to equip
Canada with the tools it needed to mitigate the effects of anticipated
unemployment by providing certain classes of unemployed persons with benefits
and by setting up job search centres. The transfer of jurisdiction was to be a
tool for internal organization involving both short‑term relief measures,
namely benefits, and medium‑term measures, namely job placement services
for the unemployed.
44
Parliament continued to exercise its jurisdiction over unemployment
insurance for the benefit of Canadians even after the period of unemployment
that followed the war. The nature of unemployment has changed as prevailing
conditions in Canada, and the needs of Canadians, have changed. Parliament
must adapt its actions to new circumstances, in a manner consistent with the
limits resulting from the constitutional division of powers. In a case such as
this, where a specific power has been detached from a more general power, the
specific power cannot be evaluated in relation to the general power, because
any evolution would then be regarded as an encroachment. Rather, it is
necessary to consider the essential elements of the power and to ascertain
whether the impugned measure is consistent with the natural evolution of that
power.
2.3.3 Essential Elements of Unemployment
Insurance
45
On the one hand, no constitutional head of power is static. On the
other hand, the evolution of society cannot justify changing the nature of a
power assigned by the Constitution to either level of government. These two
statements are not contradictory. As Professors H. Brun and
G. Tremblay write:
[translation]
Ultimately, however, there is no inconsistency between dynamic interpretation
and adherence to the original intent of the framers: in order for something to
evolve, it must have a starting point. See Reference re Prov. Electoral
Boundaries (Sask.), [1991] 2 S.C.R. 158, at pp. 180‑87.
To determine the original intent of the framers, it is obviously necessary to
start with a generous reading of the words they used, taken in their
strictly legal context. That context may also be expanded by having regard to
elements “extrinsic” to it that are more historical than legal in nature.
[Emphasis added.]
(Droit constitutionnel (4th ed. 2002), at pp. 207-8)
46
In constitutional interpretation, the essential elements of a power are
determined by adopting a generous reading of the words used, taken in their
strictly legal context. The interpretation may also be expanded by having
regard to relevant historical elements.
47
The jurisdiction over unemployment insurance must be interpreted
progressively and generously. It must be considered in the context of a
measure that applies throughout Canada and the purpose of which, according to
the intention of the framers of the constitutional amendment, is to curb the
destitution caused by unemployment and provide a framework for workers’ re‑entry
into the labour market.
48
With these principles and objectives in mind, four characteristics that
are essential to a public unemployment insurance plan can be identified:
(1) It is a public insurance program based on
the concept of social risk
(2) the purpose of which is to preserve
workers’ economic security and ensure their re‑entry into the labour
market
(3) by paying temporary income replacement
benefits
(4) in the event of an interruption of
employment.
49
These four characteristics do not take into account the way a plan may
have been implemented over the years, but allow changes in the labour market to
be taken into consideration. Thus, the social risks associated with
unemployment may vary from one period to another, and the way that the needs of
the plan are calculated may be revised. Social policy choices are part of the
exercise of the jurisdiction. They do not define what it is.
50
Having defined the essential characteristics of a public unemployment
insurance plan, I will now address two specific objections raised by the
Attorney General of Quebec. He submits, first, that maternity benefits are
granted in respect of a voluntary absence from work and cannot be regarded as
relating to insurance. He also asserts that the individuals who receive
maternity benefits are not unemployed, because they are not available for work.
2.3.4 Maternity Benefits as an Insurance
Measure
51
In Martin Service Station, at p. 1004, Beetz J.
accepted that Parliament’s jurisdiction over unemployment insurance is
qualified by an insurance aspect. Citing that principle, the Attorney General
of Quebec submits that an interruption of work due to maternity cannot be
insured against, because no risk is involved. He defines a risk as [translation] “a fortuitous event the
materialization [of which cannot] depend exclusively on the will of the
parties, and in particular on the will of the insured”.
52
While I do not dispute that this narrow definition of the word “risk” is
often used in private insurance plans, I am of the view that it cannot be used
to exclude maternity from any unemployment insurance plan.
53
The Attorney General’s argument based on the absence of risk reflects
the arguments addressed by this Court in Brooks v. Canada Safeway Ltd.,
[1989] 1 S.C.R. 1219, at pp. 1237‑38. In that case, the
Court had to decide whether pregnancy could be covered by an insurance plan
even though it did not involve an accident or illness. The employer submitted
that it was excluded because it was a voluntary condition. The employer’s
argument was not accepted. Dickson C.J. wrote the following:
It seems indisputable that in our society pregnancy is a valid health‑related
reason for being absent from work. It is to state the obvious to say that
pregnancy is of fundamental importance in our society. Indeed, its importance
makes description difficult. To equate pregnancy with, for instance, a
decision to undergo medical treatment for cosmetic surgery — which sort of
comparison the respondent's argument implicitly makes — is fallacious. If the
medical condition associated with procreation does not provide a legitimate
reason for absence from the workplace, it is hard to imagine what would provide
such a reason. Viewed in its social context pregnancy provides a perfectly
legitimate health‑related reason for not working and as such it should be
compensated by the Safeway plan. In terms of the economic consequences to the
employee resulting from the inability to perform employment duties, pregnancy
is no different from any other health‑related reason for absence from the
workplace. [pp. 1237-38]
54
In our times, having a child is often the result of a deliberate act
decided on by one or both parents. There are many facets to pregnancy,
however. Despite all the technological progress that has been made, conception
does not result from a mathematical calculation that can be used to determine
when or even if it will occur. In addition, the benefit derived from
procreation extends beyond the benefit to the parents. Children are one
of society’s most important assets, and the contribution made by parents cannot
be overstated. If pregnancy may be regarded as an insurable risk in private
insurance plans, as was held in Brooks, then a fortiori it may be
so regarded in a public plan.
55
The approach taken by the Attorney General of Quebec therefore
disregards the collective impact of the parents’ decision and the social role
of a public insurance plan. Apart from the fact that it is perfectly
legitimate for a commercial insurer to agree to insure pregnant women against
the loss of employment income, it must be acknowledged that the public nature
of the unemployment insurance plan provides even greater justification for the
decision to have all contributors assume together the risk of the loss of
women’s earnings that is associated with maternity. Just as the
marginalization of seasonal workers cannot justify excluding them, as was
suggested in the Gill Report, at p. 12, protection against the loss
of earnings that results from maternity is a social policy decision. Even
though some people may see a tenuous connection with the concept of insurable
risk in the strict sense, the jurisdiction in relation to unemployment is in
the nature of social insurance. This means that the concept of risk may be
understood in the social, and not the actuarial, sense. S. Ledoux
provides a helpful analysis of the main characteristics of a social insurance
plan and the concept of risk that applies to such a plan in L’influence du
droit constitutionnel dans l’émergence et l’évolution du droit aux prestations
de maternité, d’adoption et parentales au sein de la Loi sur l’assurance‑chômage
(1991), at p. 76:
[translation]
Social insurance is the application, on a much larger scale, of the principle
of pooling that has long been the basis of insurance. Social insurance [is] a
special technique of organizing provision collectively by securing
contributions from various groups for a need that cannot be left safely to
individuals’ or families’ own resources. [L. C. Marsh, Report
on Social Security for Canada (1943), at pp. 10 and 15] The
primary objective of social insurance is therefore to reduce individuals’
economic insecurity by promising them compensation in relation to social risks.
[L. Poulin Simon, Les assurances sociales pour une sécurité du
revenu des salariés (1981), at p. 7] [Emphasis added.]
56
The decision to offer women the possibility of receiving income replacement
benefits when they are off work due to pregnancy is therefore a social policy
decision that is not incompatible with the concept of risk in the realm of
insurance, and that can moreover be harmoniously incorporated into a public
unemployment insurance plan.
2.3.5 Maternity Benefits as an Unemployment
Protection Measure
57
The Attorney General of Quebec also argues that pregnancy cannot be
characterized as an unemployment situation because a pregnant woman is not
capable of and available for work. This argument cannot be accepted either.
58
The Depression and war that led to the realization that a national
unemployment insurance plan was necessary ended a long time ago, but
unemployment itself endures. The nature of unemployment has changed, however.
The unemployment that was foreseen in the 1930s was expected to result from the
end of war‑related production activities. It was conjunctural
unemployment. But unemployment can also relate to the period between the time
when a person loses one job and the time when he or she is hired for another
job, apart from any structural constraint in a particular industry. This
situation is described as frictional unemployment: G. Campeau, From
UI to EI: Waging War on the Welfare State (2005), at p. 32.
Although it was of course the conjunctural unemployment associated with the
Depression and the war that led to the adoption of unemployment insurance
measures, there has never been any doubt that frictional unemployment can also
give rise to an entitlement to benefits.
59
The labour market also experiences technological unemployment, that is,
unemployment brought about by technological change. Whether unemployment is
conjunctural, structural, frictional or technological, the interruption of
employment will undeniably be regarded as an unemployment situation regardless
of the nature of the unemployment.
60
The eligibility requirements for benefits under the UIA, 1940 have been
expanded to take the new realities into account. Availability for employment does
not necessarily mean that there are realistic chances of finding employment.
Seasonal unemployment provides a clear illustration of this reality. While the
first legislation excluded all employment in agriculture, forestry, fishing and
hunting (UIA, 1940, First Schedule, Part II), there can now be no question
regarding the public plan’s support in relation to these economic activities,
which are vital to Canada but are subject to constraints over which employers
and employees have no control.
61
The expressions “unemployed person”, “unemployed” and “unemployment”
have a variety of meanings. For example, according to the Nouveau Petit
Robert (2003), at p. 431, a “chômeur” [unemployed person] is a
person who is involuntarily deprived of employment; the word “chômé”
[unemployed] relates to a requirement to stop working; and the word “chômage”
[unemployment], in its ordinary sense, means an interruption of work resulting
from a lack of employment. However, that dictionary also gives a more modern
definition, which refers simply to an interruption of work. Merriam‑Webster’s
Collegiate Dictionary (10th ed. 1994), at p. 1290, defines the
expression “unemployment insurance” as follows: “social insurance against
involuntary unemployment that provides unemployment compensation for a limited
period to unemployed workers”.
62
The ordinary meaning fits easily into the early unemployment insurance
legislation. Stable, permanent employment was indeed the rule at that time.
However, the eligibility rules in those statutes do not define the limits of
Parliament’s jurisdiction. Today, interruptions of employment have multiple
causes. Lengthy layoffs, when a worker is entitled to be recalled, and
temporary or part‑time employment are only a few examples of situations
indicating a need to reflect on the concept of unemployment. The idea of a
“lack of employment” or of a situation being involuntary is not a reliable
guide. The modern meaning, which simply requires that there be an interruption
of employment, is a better reflection of the contemporary reality of the
workplace and more readily incorporates the meaning given to the other words
that derive from the same root.
63
Furthermore, some new kinds of benefits have been considered by the
courts, and in each case this Court has interpreted the provisions liberally.
For example, a provision that discriminated against fishers was held to be
invalid: Attorney General of Canada v. Silk, [1983]
1 S.C.R. 335. In another case, teaching contracts were construed so
as not to interfere with an entitlement to maternity benefits: Dick v.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada, [1980] 2 S.C.R. 243.
64
A review of the circumstances surrounding the inclusion of interruptions
of employment due to illness offers a helpful parallel. The possibility of
making benefits available to contributors who were sick was studied prior to
the enactment of the UIA, 1940: Report of the Royal Commission on
Dominion‑Provincial Relations (1940) (Rowell‑Sirois Report),
vol. II, at pp. 25, 31 and 40. This suggests at the very least that,
despite the fact that the contributor would not be available for work, such
benefits did not at the time appear to be antinomic to unemployment insurance.
From this perspective, the obligations to seek employment and to be capable of
working are regarded as mechanisms for screening applications and providing an
incentive to return to the labour market, and not as essential characteristics
of the constitutional power.
65
The requirement that a claimant seek or be available for employment,
which is inapplicable in the case of maternity benefits, is sometimes
unrealistic. For example, seasonal workers or people working in remote regions
will often be unsuccessful if they seek work during their periods of
interruption of earnings. The nature of unemployment varies from one period to
another, from one region to another and from one group to another, but the
reality remains the same. These are workers who are not receiving their
employment income.
66
The extent of the protection required by Canadian society changes with
the needs of the labour force. A growing portion of the labour force is made
up of women, and women have particular needs that are of concern to society as
a whole. An interruption of employment due to maternity can no longer be
regarded as a matter of individual responsibility. Women’s connection to the
labour market is well established, and their inclusion in the expression
“unemployed persons” is as natural an extension as the extension involving
other classes of insured persons who lose their employment income. To limit a
public unemployment insurance plan, from a constitutional perspective, to cases
in which contributors are actively seeking employment or are available for
employment would amount to denying its social function. The social nature of
unemployment insurance requires that Parliament be able to adapt the plan to
the new realities of the workplace. Some eligibility requirements derive from
the essence of the unemployment concept, while other requirements are, rather,
mechanisms that reflect a social policy choice linked to the implementation of
the plan.
2.3.6 Conclusion with
Respect to the Identification of the Head of Power
67
The Attorney General of Quebec submits that the social program under
which maternity benefits are paid is, in pith and substance, a measure to
assist families. While that is an undeniable effect, it is not the pith and
substance of the program. The EIA governs the entitlement to benefits: it
entitles pregnant women to receive benefits when they sustain an interruption
of earnings. However, not all the various aspects of interruptions of work
associated with maternity relate to unemployment insurance. Maternity leave is
not governed by the EIA . Parliament does not grant female workers either
maternity leave or job security. Because the provinces have a general power in
relation to civil rights, it is the provinces that are responsible for
establishing most of the rules that are needed to protect the jobs of pregnant
women. Those rules are provided for in provincial statutes, and are often
incorporated into individual contracts of employment and collective labour
agreements. Standards of this nature are provided for in the Act respecting
labour standards, R.S.Q., c. N‑1.1, s. 81.4.
68
In pith and substance, maternity benefits are a mechanism for providing
replacement income during an interruption of work. This is consistent with the
essence of the federal jurisdiction over unemployment insurance, namely the
establishment of a public insurance program the purpose of which is to preserve
workers’ economic security and ensure their re‑entry into the labour
market by paying income replacement benefits in the event of an interruption of
employment.
2.4 Are Parental
Benefits of the Same Nature as Maternity Benefits?
69
The parental benefits program arose out of a recommendation made by a
task force established by the then Minister of Employment and Immigration, and
was first implemented in 1984 out of a concern for fairness to adoptive parents
(Unemployment Insurance in the 1980s, at p. 70; Act to amend the
Unemployment Insurance Act, 1971 (No. 3), S.C. 1980‑81‑82‑83,
c. 150, s. 5).
70
The purpose of benefits for adoptive parents is to enable the parents to
care for the child who has been placed with them for adoption. Here again, the
EIA does not govern parental leave. It merely allows parents who are absent
from work for this purpose to receive income replacement benefits.
71
The program was extended to all parents in response to the judgment of
the Federal Court in Schachter v. Canada, [1988] 3 F.C. 515
(T.D.): Act to amend the Unemployment Insurance Act and the
Employment and Immigration Department and Commission Act, S.C. 1990,
c. 40, s. 14. In that decision, Strayer J. described the
discrimination faced by natural parents on the birth of their children. While
adoptive parents were able to take time off work and receive benefits to care
for their children, natural parents were denied that choice. Strayer J.
regarded the distinction as unjustified discrimination against natural parents
in relation to adoptive parents. The decision was appealed to the Federal
Court of Appeal and this Court on other issues, but the finding that the
provision was discriminatory was not contested.
72
This unjustified distinction had in fact already been noted,
specifically in relation to natural fathers, in the Boyer Report, at
p. 9, which considered their exclusion to be the most obvious flaw. The
question was also addressed in the Report of the Commission of Inquiry on
Unemployment Insurance (1986) (Forget Report), at p. 123, in
which the exclusion was characterized as “surprising”.
73
I see no reason why parental benefits should be characterized
differently from maternity benefits. In both cases, the benefits relate to the
function of the reproduction of society. The status of adoptive parent carries
with it all the rights and obligations of a natural parent. All parents have
equal obligations. At a time when society is stressing the responsibility of
both parents, they cannot be treated unequally. Such an approach would be
anachronistic. Because of the discrimination that would occur if benefits were
not paid to both natural parents and adoptive parents, parental benefits must
be permitted. The inclusion of this type of benefits in the unemployment
insurance plan is an extension of the plan that is made necessary by the
equality rights that are also an integral part of our Constitution.
74
As in the case of maternity benefits, the right of claimants to take
time off work is governed not by the EIA , but by provincial legislation: Act
respecting labour standards, s. 81.10.
75
I therefore find that parental benefits, like maternity benefits, are in
pith and substance a mechanism for providing replacement income when an
interruption of employment occurs as a result of the birth or arrival of a
child, and that it can be concluded from their pith and substance that
Parliament may rely on the jurisdiction assigned to it under s. 91 (2A) of
the Constitution Act, 1867 .
3. Conclusion
76
The evolution of the scope of a constitutional head of power cannot
result in encroachment on a power assigned to another level of government. A
review of the historical and legal contexts makes it possible to identify the
essential characteristics onto which new realities can be grafted.
77
The evolution of the role of women in the labour market and of the role
of fathers in child care are two social factors that have had an undeniable
economic impact on individuals who are active participants in the labour
market. A generous interpretation of the provisions of the Constitution
permits social change to be taken into account. The provincial legislatures
have jurisdiction over social programs, but Parliament also has the power to
provide income replacement benefits to parents who must take time off work to
give birth to or care for children. The provision of income replacement
benefits during maternity leave and parental leave does not trench on the
provincial jurisdiction over property and civil rights and may validly be
included in the EIA .
78
For these reasons, I would allow the appeal, set aside the decision of
the Court of Appeal, with costs, and answer the constitutional questions as
follows:
Question 1: Does s. 22 of the Employment
Insurance Act encroach upon provincial legislative competence and, more
particularly, provincial legislative competence over property and civil rights
and matters of a merely local or private nature under ss. 92(13) and
92(16) of the Constitution Act, 1867 ?
Answer: No.
Question 2: Does s. 23 of the Employment
Insurance Act encroach upon provincial legislative competence and, more
particularly, provincial legislative competence over property and civil rights
and matters of a merely local or private nature under ss. 92(13) and
92(16) of the Constitution Act, 1867 ?
Answer: No.
Question 3: Is s. 22 of the Employment
Insurance Act ultra vires the Parliament of Canada and, more
particularly, does it exceed the Parliament of Canada’s legislative competence
over unemployment insurance under s. 91 (2A) of the Constitution Act, 1867 ?
Answer: No.
Question 4: Is s. 23 of the Employment
Insurance Act ultra vires the Parliament of Canada and, more
particularly, does it exceed the Parliament of Canada’s legislative competence
over unemployment insurance under s. 91 (2A) of the Constitution Act,
1867 ?
Answer: No.
APPENDIX
Employment
Insurance Act, S.C. 1996, c. 23 , as it read at the time of the
reference:
22. (1) [Pregnancy] Notwithstanding
section 18, but subject to this section, benefits are payable to a major
attachment claimant who proves her pregnancy.
(2) [Weeks for which benefits may be paid] Subject
to section 12, benefits are payable to a major attachment claimant under
this section for each week of unemployment in the period
(a) that begins the earlier of
(i) eight weeks before the week in which her confinement is
expected, and
(ii) the week in which her confinement occurs;
and
(b) that ends 17 weeks after the later of
(i) the week in which her confinement is expected, and
(ii) the week in which her confinement occurs.
(3) [Limitation] When benefits are payable to a
claimant for unemployment caused by pregnancy and any allowances, money or
other benefits are payable to the claimant for that pregnancy under a
provincial law, the benefits payable to the claimant under this Act shall be
reduced or eliminated as prescribed.
(4) [Application of section 18] For the
purposes of section 13, the provisions of section 18 do not apply to
the two week period that immediately precedes the period described in
subsection (2).
(5) [Earnings deducted] If benefits are payable
under this section to a major attachment claimant who receives earnings for a
period that falls in a week in the period described in subsection (2), the
provisions of subsection 19(2) do not apply and, subject to
subsection 19(3), all those earnings shall be deducted from the benefits
paid for that week.
(6) [Extension of period] If a child who is born
of the claimant’s pregnancy is hospitalized, the period during which benefits
are payable under subsection (2) shall be extended by the number of weeks
during which the child is hospitalized.
(7) [Limitation] The extended period shall end no
later than 52 weeks after the week of confinement.
23. (1) [Parental benefits] Notwithstanding
section 18, but subject to this section, benefits are payable to a major
attachment claimant to care for one or more new‑born children of the
claimant or one or more children placed with the claimant for the purpose of adoption
under the laws governing adoption in the province in which the claimant
resides.
(2) [Weeks for which benefits may be paid] Subject
to section 12, benefits under this section are payable for each week of
unemployment in the period
(a) that begins with the week in which the child or children of
the claimant are born or the child or children are actually placed with the
claimant for the purpose of adoption; and
(b) that ends 52 weeks after the week in which the child
or children of the claimant are born or the child or children are actually
placed with the claimant for the purpose of adoption.
(3) [Repealed, S.C. 2000, c. 14,
s. 4 ]
(4) [Division of weeks of benefits] If two major
attachment claimants are caring for a child referred to in subsection (1),
weeks of benefits payable under this section may be divided between the major
attachment claimants.
(5) [Deferral of waiting period] A major
attachment claimant who makes a claim for benefits under this section may have
his or her waiting period deferred until he or she makes another claim for
benefits in the same benefit period, otherwise than under section 22 or
this section, if
(a) the claimant has already made a claim for benefits under
section 22 or this section in respect of the same child and has served the
waiting period;
(b) another major attachment claimant has made a claim for
benefits under section 22 or this section in respect of the same child and
that other claimant has served or is serving his or her waiting period;
(c) another major attachment claimant is making a claim for
benefits under section 22 or this section in respect of the same child at
the same time as the claimant and that other claimant elects to serve the
waiting period; or
(d) the claimant or another major attachment claimant meets the
prescribed requirements.
Appeal allowed with costs.
Solicitor for the appellant: Attorney General of Canada,
Montréal.
Solicitor for the respondent: Attorney General of Quebec,
Sainte‑Foy.
Solicitor for the intervener the Attorney General of New
Brunswick: Attorney General of New Brunswick, Fredericton.
Solicitor for the intervener the Attorney General of Newfoundland
and Labrador: Attorney General of Newfoundland and Labrador, St.
John’s.
Solicitors for the intervener the Canadian Labour
Congress: Sack Goldblatt Mitchell, Toronto.