Title: WDW 244H1F 2003W
1WDW 244H1F 2003W
- LABOUR RELATIONS
- Professor Frank Reid
- Centre for Industrial Relations
- Week 3
- The Legal Environment
- Course website http//individual.utoronto.ca/fran
kreid
2Lecture Format
- Lecture times
- - UofT time zone, lectures start at 10 minutes
past the hour and finish on the hour. - - i.e. lecture starts at 610pm, breaks at
700pm - - resumes at 710pm, ends at 800pm.
- - timing of 10 minute break may vary to suit
material - Questions
- - Questions welcome during class or after class.
- - No questions during the 10 minute break,
please.
3The Political Environment
- Forces similar in many Western countries
- Reduction in size of govt. govt. deficit
- Globalization, deregulation, privatization
- Privatization of Air Canada, Ontario Hydro
- 1988 Goods and Service Tax (GST)
- Free trade
- 1989 Free Trade Agreement (FTA) with U.S.
- 1994 NAFTA with U.S. and Mexico
- Free Trade Agreement of the Americas (FTAA) ?
- User pay principle (e.g. higher tuition)
4Legal Environment 3 regimes
- Ref D McPhillips, GPT, chap 8
- Three Regimes
- Common Law of Employment
- Applies to individual employment contracts in the
absence of legislation - Inferred from past court cases (i.e. legal
jurisprudence) - Statutory Law
- Legislation that applies to all employees, both
union and nonunion - Eg. Ontario Human Rights Code (HRC),
- Ontario Employment Standards Act (ESA)
- Collective Bargaining Legislation
- Applies to unionized employees
- E.g. Ontario Labour Relations Act (OLRA)
- Various public sector statutes Crown Employees
Collective Bargaining Act (CECBA)
5Federal vs Provincial Jurisdiction
- Sections 91 92 of the Constitution Act (1981)
divide responsibility between federal and
provincial governments. - Based on the British North America Act of 1867
- Provincial jurisdiction
- Provinces given responsibility for property and
civil rights which includes employment
legislation - 90 of employees in Canada are under provincial
jurisdiction - Federal Jurisdiction
- Federal govt given jurisdiction over certain
industries which are interprovincial in nature or
of national significance - Includes federal govt employees and employees in
banking, communications (TV, radio, post office),
inter-provincial transportation (airlines,
railroads), atomic energy, etc. - Covers 10 of employees in Canada
6Snider case prov v. federal jurisdiction
- Employment legislation was determined to be a
provincial responsibility by a decision of the
British Privy Council in 1926 - At that time Supreme Court of Canada was not
highest court authority - Snider et al. v. Toronto Electric Power
Commissioners - Canadian govt passed the Industrial Disputes
Investigation (IDI) Act, requiring conciliation
before a strike - Toronto Electric Power Commissioners refused to
recognize authority of a conciliation board
established under the IDI Act - Argued federal government did not have
jurisdiction to apply the Act to municipal
employees or enact law affecting civil rights - British Privy Council declared IDI Act
unconstitutional - Result Labour relations and employment law
became provincial responsibility because it
pertained to property and civil rights.
7Common Law Principles
- Governs terms and conditions of employment not
covered by statutes. - Implied by past practices and case law (legal
jurisprudence). - Under common law an employee can be legally
dismissed for any reason (or no reason). - But employees are entitled to reasonable notice
before termination (unless there is just cause
for dismissal). - Amount of reasonable notice depends
- Age, tenure, labour market conditions,
occupation, etc. - In the case of wrongful dismissal, the courts
will not reinstate an employee. - Courts award monetary damages equivalent to the
number of months of reasonable notice the EE was
entitled to receive.
8Predicting Wrongful Dismissal Awards
- A study of Ontario 67 court decisions in wrongful
dismissal cases used regression analysis to
determine that the amount of reasonable notice - (T. Liznik, Worklife Report).
- Reasonable notice required (in months) could be
predicted quite accurately (plus or minus one
month, in 99 of cases) using the following
simple formula - notice in months 0.15 (salary in thousands of
1981 dollars) 0.38 (years of service) 1.9 (if
the person was a "top executive").
9Wallace case unfair ER conduct
- Punitive damages not generally awarded in
wrongful dismissal cases - i.e. extra damages to punish Employer for bad
behavior - Supreme Court of Canada (1997) in Wallace v.
United Grain Growers ruled that amount of notice
could be increased if dismissed employee was not
treated fairly, reasonably and decently - Jack Wallace was dismissed without explanation at
age 59 after 14 years as top salesperson in firm.
ER then claimed he was dismissed for cause. (See
vignette, GPT Chap 8)
10Constructive Dismissal
- Constructive Dismissal means that if the terms
and conditions of employment are changed
substantially without consent, the employee can
resign and sue the employer for wrongful
dismissal. - Purpose is to prevent employers forcing an
employee to resign (e.g. reduce salary by 50) to
avoid the common law requirement of reasonable
notice.
11Statutory Regulation
- Originally conceived as stop gap measure to
provide minimally acceptable terms of employment
to non-unionized employees or those with low
bargaining power - In recent years has become more pervasive and
more fully elaborated - Mandatory
- Applies to all employees
12Legal Environment in Ontario
Employment Standards Act
Human Rights Code
OHSA WSIA
Statutory Legislation
Pay Equity
Employment Equity
Repealed in 1995
Collective Bargaining Legislation
Labour Relations Act
Police Services Act
Fire Protection Prevention Act
Crown Employees Collective Bargaining Act
Public Sector Legislation
Education Act
Colleges Collective Bargaining Act
Hospital Labour Disputes Arbitration Act
13Employment Standards Act
- Sets out the minimum standards of employment and
the rights and responsibilities of both employers
and employees, both unionized and non-unionized. - Minimum wage (6.85/hour)
- Minimum annual vacation (2 weeks per year or 4
of pay in lieu) - Statutory holidays (Eight)
- New Years, Easter, Victoria Day, Canada Day,
- Labour Day, Thanksgiving, Christmas, Boxing Day
- Hours of work and overtime premium (time and a
half after 44 hours)
14Employment Standards Act
- Pregnancy Leave (17 weeks unpaid),
- Parental leave (37 weeks unpaid)
- Emergency Leave (10 days per year unpaid)
- for illness, emergencies, urgent matters
- Notice period for terminations, or pay in lieu of
notice - 3 months to 1 year service 1 week notice
- 1 year to 3 years service 2 weeks notice, and
up to - 8 years or more service 8 weeks notice
15Employment Standards Act
- Notice of mass terminations (50 or more EEs
within 4 wks) - 8 to 16 weeks notice to govt, depending on number
terminated - Severance Pay (1 week for each year employed, up
to 26 weeks) - provided EE has at least 5 years service and ER
payroll exceeds 2.5 million - severance pay is in addition to notice or
termination pay in lieu of notice
16OHSA WSIA
- Occupational Health Safety Act
- A preventive system to protect workers against
health and safety hazards on the job. - Give workers a right to participate, to know and
to refuse unsafe work. (uses the internal
responsibility system) - Workplace Safety and Insurance Act
- Purpose of workers compensation is to prevent
and compensate employees for injuries and
diseases that arise in the course of employment. - A quid pro quo whereby employees who suffer
work-related injuries give up their rights to sue
for compensation under a no-fault insurance
system.
17Ontario Human Rights Code
- Ref Guide to Ontario Human Rights Code
- www.ohrc.on.ca
- Part I Freedom from Discrimination
- Designed to prevent discrimination against
individuals on the basis of membership in
specific groups unrelated to employment.
18Employment Prohibited grounds
- Employment
- 5.-(1) Every person has a right to equal
treatment with respect to employment without
discrimination because of race, ancestry, place
of origin, colour, ethnic origin, citizenship,
creed, sex, sexual orientation, age, record of
offences, marital status, family status or
handicap. - In Ontario, about three-quarters of all human
rights complaints come from the workplace.
19Employment in HRC
- Employment is used in a very general way in the
Code. - Employees, independent contractors, and
volunteers are covered. - Complaints can be filed against, not only
employers, but also contractors, unions or boards
of directors. - Employers and unions have a joint duty to ensure
that workplaces are free of discrimination and
harassment. - The right to equal treatment with respect to
employment covers applying for a job, being
recruited, training, transfers, promotions, terms
of apprenticeship, dismissal and layoffs. - It also covers rate of pay, overtime, hours of
work, holidays, benefits, shift work, discipline
and performance evaluations.
20Systemic Discrimination
- Refers to criteria that have an adverse impact on
designated groups - Example Height Weight Requirements
- Minimum standards for height and weight are
sometimes used to screen out certain job
applicants, such as women and racial minority
groups. Such standards are only allowed if they - (1) are reasonable, genuine and related to the
job duties and - (2) cannot be changed because of cost, health or
safety reasons.
21Systemic Discrimination
- Example Language and Accent
- An employee who has been discriminated against
because of "language" or "accent", can make a
complaint based on a number of grounds, such as
ancestry, ethnic origin, place of origin and
race. - An employer can require that an employee speak
English fluently if it is a genuine job
requirement. But an employer cannot use language
or accent as a way to screen out racial
minorities or persons of particular ethnic
origins where language fluency is not really
essential to the job. - For example, an employer refuses to hire a person
from Spain as a school bus driver because he does
not speak fluent English. However, being fluent
in English is not essential to the job. This
could be discrimination because of place of
origin.
22Federal Legislation CPP
- Canada Pension Plan (CPP)
- QPP in Quebec
- Compulsory pension plan financed by equal ER and
EE contributions, introduced in 1960s - ER and EE each contributes about 4.5 of earnings
up to a ceiling level per employee of about
40,000/year - A pay-as-you-go plan rather than self financed
- Allowed low premiums in early years
23Federal Legislation EI
- Employment Insurance (EI)
- Compulsory insurance financed by EE and ER
contributions (ER 1.4 times EE) - Almost 2 of earnings for EE and 3 for ER (up to
ceiling level of about 40,000 per EE) - Provides EI benefits of about 50 of earnings (up
to ceiling level) to workers who lose their job - Rationale for ceilings prevents unseemly high
EI benefits being paid to wage EEs
24Worksharing with STC
- Program introduced in 1982 as a special feature
of employment insurance (EI) i.e. worksharing
with short-time compensation. - A redistribution of given amounts of work, EI
benefits and leisure aimed at avoiding temporary
layoffs. - E.g. unions proposed this option in response to
potential layoffs at Air Canada in October 2001.
25How Does WS w/STC Work?
- Scenario suppose a firm with needs to reduce its
workforce by 20. - Two Options
- Layoff Lay off 20 of its employees or
- WS w/STC Shorten the workweek from 5 days
per week to 4 days, and the EEs receive EI
benefits on the 5th day when they are not
working.
26History of WS w/STC
- First used in Germany in 1927 and currently used
in several European countries. - Introduced in California in 1978 and currently
used in many States (California, New York,
Washington, etc.).
27The Canadian STC Program
- Firm must be in business for at least two years.
- Magnitude of work reduction must be between 10
and 60. - Work reduction must not be seasonal.
- Expected duration of work reduction not more than
26 weeks (potential extension of 12 weeks). - Employees must be qualified under usual EI
criteria.
28Canadian STC Program
- Usual waiting period (2 weeks) for EI benefits
waived for worksharing employees. - Employees can draw conventional EI if laid off at
end of STC worksharing program (double-dipping). - Program participation requires joint application
by employer and - The union in unionized workplaces or
- A substantial majority of EEs in non-unionized
workplaces.
29ER Viewpoint on WS w/STC
- For the Employer
- Option
- Layoff 4 employees working 5 days/week
- Worksharing 5 employees working 4 days/week
- The Employer receives and pays for 20 employee
days of labour under both options.
30Govt Viewpoint on WS w/STC
- For the Government (EI costs)
- Option
- Layoff 1 employee drawing EI 5 days/week
- Worksharing 5 employees drawing EI 1 day/week
- The Government pays 5 employee days of EI
- under both options.
31EE Viewpoint on WS w/STC
- Option (Assume EI benefits 50 of wage)
-
- Layoff For the Laid Off Employee
- 50 x weekly wage 5 days leisure
- For the other Employees
- 100 x weekly wage
- Worksharing Each employee gets
- 4 days at 20 of weekly wage
- 1 day at (50)(20) of weekly wage
- 80 10
- 90 of weekly wage plus 1 extra day of leisure
- Many employees will actually be better off
under WS because they get a 20 reduction in work
for only a 10 reduction in income..
32Prediction of EEs Reaction
- Assume typical employee was working the desired
number of hours before the STC program. - Economic theory predicts that the typical
employee will prefer the STC program even if not
threatened by layoff. - Employee is getting a 20 reduction in work for
only a 10 reduction in pay.
33Evidence on EE Reaction
- Surveys of employees on STC showed that 94
supported STC and would participate again. - For employees who would have been laid off, there
are additional important psychological and social
benefits. - Avoid stress and loss of self-esteem that are
often associated with layoffs.
34Impacts on Management
- Employers receive the same level of labour under
either option and pay for the same number of
hours, however - WS can be more costly due to
- WS program administrative costs.
- Increased employee benefit costs that are a fixed
amount per employee, eg. dental plan. - Note no increased costs for benefits that are a
percentage of earnings (e.g. pensions) - Increased payroll taxes if they are a fixed
amount per employee due to ceilings, eg. CPP, EI,
etc.
35Impacts on Management
- WS can be less costly due to
- Elimination of seniority wage effects.
- Saving on costs of layoffs and recalls.
- Save on costs of hiring and training
replacements. - Improved productivity by avoiding bumping.
- Improved employees morale by reducing the
negative impact of layoffs. - STC had mixed impacts on labour costs, but on
average, resulted in a small net reduction (0.5)
in measured labour costs.
36Impacts on Government
- In theory, the Government is paying out the same
level of EI benefits under either option. - The costs of worksharing are higher due to
- The Double-dipping provision.
- Waiting period for benefits was waived.
- An estimated 30 of employees whose layoffs were
prevented by STC would not have applied for EI
benefits if they had been laid off.
37Impacts of WS on Society
- Cost savings due to reduction of the social costs
of unemployment, eg. decrease in stress related
diseases, crime, etc. - Difficult to quantify (but not zero).
- Benefits and costs to society as a whole are
actually less difficult to quantify because many
wash out. - E.g. increased ER expenditure on dental benefits
under WS is a cost to the employer but a benefit
to employees (washes out for society as a whole). - E.g. increased government EI costs also are a
benefit to employees (wash out for society as a
whole). - Benefits estimated to exceed cost (B/C 1.3).
- Increased equity most important benefit (not
quantified).
38Pay Equity vs Employment Equity
- Pay Equity Act
- Enacted by the Liberal government in 1987.
- Known as Comparable Worth in the US.
- Objective Equal pay for work of equal value.
- Currently in effect in Ontario.
- Employment Equity Act
- Enacted in 1993 by the NDP.
- Known as Affirmative Action in the US.
- Objective Identify and remove barriers to
selection, hiring and promotion of targeted
minority groups. - Repealed by the Harris government in 1995.