Minister Boulet invites IVAC employees to denounce their working conditions

The Minister of Labor, Jean Boulet, on Thursday invited IVAC employees to “denounce” their working conditions.

“Let’s raise our hands. If there are employees who have particular difficulties, let them report it,” suggested Mr. Boulet. The minister is responsible for the CNESST, which is responsible for compensation for victims of criminal acts (IVAC).

Mr. Boulet suggested that he was unaware of the extent of the distress among IVAC employees, but said he was made aware of a “transition period” and a “significant” number of files.He said he had spoken with the interim president and CEO of the Commission for Standards, Equity, Health and Safety at Work (CNESST), Bruno Labrecque, following the publication of an article in The duty.

This text reported the feeling of abandonment and helplessness of IVAC employees responsible for announcing to victims of crime that their benefits will end in October 2024. A reform of the IVAC adopted in 2021 broadened access to this plan, and employees must, in fact, manage a thousand pending files.

“We support them,” assured the Minister of Labor, noting his discussion with Mr. Labrecque. We have an employee assistance program, there is support because there is a transition period and that requires a greater volume of work. Everyone’s psychological health is worrying. »

Mr. Boulet did not want to say how many victims were notified of the end of their benefits for “temporary total incapacity” in October 2024. He said he was working “with the Ministry of Justice to ensure that the transition is done in the most humane way and the most respectful of psychological needs.

The upcoming end of benefits is creating a shock wave among victims, some of whom fear a wave of suicides.

No fast track to social assistance

The Minister responsible for Social Solidarity, Chantal Rouleau, quickly passed in front of the journalists. “It’s being discussed,” she simply said.

Victims compensated by IVAC will be redirected to its ministry’s programs — aid and social solidarity — if they are unable to return to work once their benefits are cut. However, the State has not provided any particular access route for these victims. The only path to these programs is last resort financial aid. To be eligible, a person who does not have dependent children must have a maximum of $887 in their possession. The most generous program, with benefits of $1,273 per month ($15,276 per year), requires the filing of evidence that a victim has had severe employment constraints for a minimum of five and a half years.

The oppositions have once again asked the Minister of Justice, Simon Jolin-Barrette, to review his reform of the IVAC. “Do you still find that your reform is good? A victim is considering medical assistance in dying…” wrote Liberal MP André A. Morin on X. Its leader, Marc Tanguay, criticized the minister for having poorly assessed the “tangible” impact of his reform on the ground.

“These are calls for help from the victims, but also from the people who are responsible for helping them,” underlined MP Pascal Paradis, of the Parti Québécois. “How come he [le ministre] hadn’t seen this even though he had been alerted, in particular by the Public Protector? »

The MP invited the minister to “listen, to consider the effects of his reform and to see if there are any problems to resolve”. Despite the good intentions behind the reform, we must ask ourselves “if there are not angles that had not been poorly considered,” he argued.

With Alexandre Robillard

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