Title: Employment Law
1Employment Law
- What is employment?
- Employment contract
- Employer duties, employee duties
- Employment conditions
- Common law v statute law
- Termination
- Unions and collective agreements
- Health and safety
2What is employment?
- Employee v independent contractor
- Employment relationship stronger
- Control test
- Organization test
3Employee or independent contractor?
4Employee or independent contractor?
5Mario Zupan v City of Vancouver
- Zupan Trucking Ltd., wholly owned by Mario Zupan,
- long-term contract to provide trucking services
to Engineering Dept. - Only one truck and Mario personally drove the
truck except on rare occasions - On a day he hired a driver, the driver was found
smoking marijuana. The City refused to engage
Zupan Trucking Ltd. - Mario Zupan sued for wrongful dismissal.
- Is this a case of employment termination or
repudiation of a contract?
6Mario Zupan v City of Vancouver
7Common law
- Law of Master and Servant
- Largely replaced by
- Contract, e.g., employment contract or Collective
Agreement (union contract) - statute law, e.g., Employment Standards Act,
Worker Compensation Act, Human Rights Code etc - Provides implied terms to a contract
8Common law Employers Duties
- Safety, wages
- Defined work, - job description
- duties, standards, compensation, term etc
- Clear expectations, supervision
- Vicariously liable for employees performance and
tort actions - Vicarious performance v personal performance
- Reasonable notice at termination
9Common law Employees Duty
- Skills claimed,
- Reasonable competence,
- Honesty, good faith, loyalty,
- Punctual,
- Confidentiality (see Trade Secrets below)
- Non-competition
- Reasonable notice
10Human Rights
- Human Rights Code
- B.F.O.R.s
- Positive discrimination affirmative action
programs Sec. 15(2) of Charter - Employment equity (see below)
- Pay equity (see below)
11Employment contract
- Written or verbal
- Indefinite term v set term
- Terms
- compensation, (benefits, bonuses, severance)
- job description, reporting, responsibility,
authority, job evaluation, - Protection of company, trade secrets,
confidentiality, - Probation, overtime, sick and vacation leave,
benefits, bonus
12B.C. Employment Standards Act (federal Canada
Labour Code)
- www.labour.gov.bc.ca/esb/igm/welcome.htm)
- Hours of work - 40 averaged over a 4 week
schedule - Overtime OT after 8 hours (double time after 12
hours) or after scheduled hours of day in
schedule over an averaging period of 1, 2, 3 or 4
weeks. - Statutory holidays OT but must work 15 of 30
days previous - Minimum daily pay 2 hours if up to 8 hour
shift, 4 hours if 8 hour shift
13B.C. Employment Standards Act
- Records and wage stubs 2 years
- Minimum wages - 8.00 /hr except 6.00 for 1st
500 hours - Unpaid leaves pregnancy (17 weeks), jury,
parental, family (5 days), bereavement - Child labour if under 15 - permission of ES
director, parents, school - Vacation 1 to 5 years 2 weeks or 4
- After 5 years 3 weeks or 6
14B.C. Employment Standards Act
- Termination and severance
- 3 months to 1 year 1 week
- 1 year to less than 3 years 2 weeks
- 3 years and more 1 week per year to a maximum
of 8 weeks - Uniforms (reimbursed) v. safety equipment (no
reimbursement) - Full or part exemption - professionals, oil and
gas, logging, silviculture, film, taxis,
agriculture, high tech, long haul truckers,
managers
15B.C. Employment Standards Act
- Collective agreements override if greater
- Dispute resolution
- use Self-help kit before calling the Employment
Standards Branch.
16B.C. Employment Standards Act Just Cause
burden of proof on the employer
- MORE EASILY DETERMINED -
- assault,
- conflict of interest,
- theft or fraud,
- dishonesty,
- breach of company rules,
- MORE DIFFICULT TO DETERMINE -
- Misconduct,
- harassment,
- breach of duty,
- chronic absenteeism or tardiness,
- serious undermining of the corporate culture,
- unsatisfactory performance
17B.C. Employment Standards Act Canada Labour Code
- Employer
- penalties old new
- 1st offense 0 150
- 2nd offense 150 2,500
- 3rd offense 250 10,000
- 4th offense 500 10,000
18Sexual Harassment
- Offender liable
- Employer may be liable if ignored problem or had
no policy - Be proactive and preventive
- Create a policy
- Notify and educate
- Encourage communication
- Ease of complaint procedure
- Discipline written warning, suspension,
dismissal
19Termination
- Rightful dismissal -
- just cause - fundamental breach by employee
- without cause an employer may terminate any
employee. - only question is length of notice or severance
pay - Employers in stronger position
- To protect employees
- Common law,
- statute law,
- contract law and
- collective agreements
20Termination
- Wrongful dismissal
- Unable to defend just cause
- Insufficient notice or severance if termination
without cause - constructive dismissal
- Downgrading a persons job
- Case Ager v. Motorola (1989) older employee
had guaranteed base salary reduced loss of
company car but sales commission increased. Is
this constructive dismissal?
21Defendable just cause
- Incompetence
- ensure probation period, written warnings,
behaviour not approved (or ignored) by employer - Misconduct
- dishonesty, cheating, disrespect, uncooperative
attitude, failure to obey reasonable orders - Give notice, give chance to change,
- If proven dishonesty immediate dismissal
- Case Dooley v C.N. Webber (1994) manager has
an affair with a subordinate, against clear order
from senior management. Is this just cause?
22Defendable just cause
- Misconduct contd
- Case Laird v. Sask. RR Football Club P
(equipment manager) insolent to referees and
coach, terminated. Is this just cause? - Conflict of interest moonlighting
- Sexual harassment investigate carefully
- Personality conflict NO!
- Retaliation whistle blower protection
- Case Pollinger v Bergman Graphics worker
terminated when he told employer of complaint to
Ministry of Labour for workplace smoking. Is
this misconduct? Appropriate remedy?
23Termination without cause
- Notice or severance pay in lieu of notice
- How determine?
- Common law precedents of recent settlements
- Statute law Employment Standards
- Contract
- Union collective agreement
- Factors -
- Type of employment, length of service, age, job
market, health, deteriorating performance?
Out-placement service offered?
24Termination without cause
- Case Bardall v Globe and Mail P. (advertising
manager) terminated without cause, found work
immediately (P. mitigated) but at lower pay
appropriate remedy? - Layoff permanent or temporary economic
conditions how much severance? - E.I. Only after severance?
25Wrongful dismissal cases
- Bohemier v. Storwal International
- older worker laid off, downsizing, letter sent by
taxi to his home. - In addition to severance, are there other
remedies? - Pilato v. Hamilton Place Convention Centre
- CEO lied to protect politicians on his board from
embarrassment, became a political scandal, fired
while on holiday - What is an appropriate remedy?
26Equal pay and pay equity
- To prevent gender pay inequities
- Four principles
- Equal pay for equal work
- Equal pay for substantially similar work
- Equal pay for work of equal value
- Pay equity
- Case Union v Quebec City jail
- Female jail guards paid less than male guards all
of whom were former police officers.
27Employment equity
- Despite Charter and H.R. codes
- some jobs, professions job ghettos or poorly
represented by genders, ethnicity etc - Employers must remove historic or systemic
barriers, e.g., police forces
28Unions and collective bargaining
- Federal Canada Labour Code
- Provincial B.C. Labour Relations Code
- Terminology
- Bargaining unit (BU)
- Bargaining agent (BA)
- Collective bargaining collective agreement (CA)
- Unfair labour practices
29Phases of activity
- Organizing
- union trying to become bargaining agent (BA)
- Certification
- Formal recognition of BA usually a vote
- Bargaining union negotiates a new contract
- Establishes or re-negotiates collective agreement
(CA) - Job action possible - strike or lockout
- Contract administration
- day to day implementation of the CA - grievances
30Collective agreements
- Pertains to ALL employees in the BU
- No individual deals except in sports,
- Clauses
- Define the BU, BA, management rights, jobs
- Wages, benefits, pension, vacation
- Seniority, promotion, layoff, termination,
severance, - Grievance procedure, discipline
- Performance appraisal, personnel records,
- Length of contract, commencing of new round of
bargaining
31Types of union recognition
- Closed shop union chooses members, employer
hires from list Construction hiring hall - Union shop employer hires, then all must join
the union - Rand formula popular compromise, dues are
mandatory but membership in union is optional - Open shop mix of unionized and non union
workers usually voluntary dues normally weak
unions
32Contract administration
- Grievance procedure in the CA
- 1st - shop floor level, front-line supervisor and
unions shop steward - 2nd , next - refer to middle management, H. R.
Department union local executive - 3rd, next, refer to senior management and union
executive - Lastly, if still unresolved, take to arbitration
expensive!
33Types of disputes
- Interest dispute during bargaining for a CA
job action permitted - Rights dispute during contract administration,
about interpretation of the CA no job action,
use grievance procedure - Jurisdiction dispute between unions bitter!
- Recognition dispute during organizing campaign
34Case Aylwards (cob as Hotel Mortier) v. Retail,
Wholesale, Dept. Store Union of Nfld
- Union attempted to negotiate but management cited
many reasons for delay - Union went on strike
- Management sought a court order declaring the
strike illegal as the union had not gone through
all the processes leading to a strike (e.g.,
mandatory conciliation) as mandated by the Labour
Code - Is this an illegal strike?
35Job Actions
- Strike (full or partial) or work-to-rule
(slowdown) by union - Lockout by management
- Procedure
- Complete minimum bargaining period
- Hold strike vote give notice
- Mandatory conciliation (government)
- Cooling off period
- Strike or lock-out
- Picketing information only, no intimidation
- Primary v secondary
- Replacement workers, scabs
36Health and Safety
- Common law employer duty to provide safe
environment - But strong defenses by employer -
- Employee contributory negligent
- Employee voluntary assumption of risk
- Fellow employee negligent (not employer)
- Need for statute law!
37Health and Safety
- B.C. Workers Compensation Act
- Safety issues
- Conditions, identify hazards, protections
- Education, inspection, hear complaints,
investigate, enforcement - WCB premiums vary with risk
- Insurance program mandatory, no fault
- No right of employees to sue
- Pre-determined benefits based on need of injured
employee
38Trade secrets confidentiality
- Trade secrets a competitive advantage
- Confidential
- is objective, specific, e.g., customer list
- Not subjective such as know how or job
skills,e g., selling skills - Restrictive covenant non competition or
confidentiality clause - Must be reasonable
- Case Seaward Kayaks Ltd. V Rees
- Defendant (plaintiffs father) began own
manufacturing business making smartrudders
designed by Plaintiff. D. contacted Ps customer
list. P. sought interim injunction