Ontario’s 2019 budget includes benefit, employment changes
April 25, 2019
Ontario’s 2019 provincial budget, presented 11 Apr 2019 by the Minister of Finance, includes employee benefit and employment changes. The budget measures aim to reduce taxes and spending, increase efficiencies, and ensure sustainable delivery of core services like healthcare and education.
Key Benefit and Employment Initiatives
Highlights of the benefit and employment changes include:
- Dental benefits for low-income seniors without private plan coverage. Ontarians aged 65 or older with annual income less than $19,300 — or joint annual income less than $32,300 for senior couples — could receive dental benefits in public health units, community health centres and Aboriginal Health Access Centres.
- Mental health, drug programs. The budget calls for expanding mental health supports and reforming drug programs for efficiency and sustainability.
- Electronic benefit communications. Amendments to the Pensions Benefits Act would allow electronic communications as the default method, with certain safeguards. Other amendments to the Insurance Act would clarify that insurers can accept electronic beneficiary designations.
- Expansion of target benefit plans. The budget proposes legislative changes to make target benefit pension plans an option for nonunion multi-employer plans.
- Workforce training. A variety of new measures would help train, reskill and build the future workforce.
A budget bill has been introduced but not yet passed. Mercer’s response offers further insights on the potential implications.
Related Resources
Non-Mercer Resources
- 2019 Ontario Budget (Ontario Ministry of Finance, 11 Apr 2019)
Other Mercer Resources
- Mercer’s Response: 2019 Ontario Budget (12 Apr 2019)
About the author(s)
Related insights