The Daily Courier

Work-life balance, precarious workers, a focus for revamp of federal labour code

- By The Canadian Press

OTTAWA — Restoring a work-life balance and better protection­s for part-time and temporary workers will be among the key focuses of a planned rewrite of Canada’s federal labour rules which are to be updated by the time Labour Day rolls around next year, Canada’s employment minister says.

Labour Minister Patty Hajdu said legislatio­n will be introduced this fall to update the decades-old federal labour standards that haven’t been revamped in a substantiv­e way since they were first written.

Hajdu said changes to the labour code would reflect key themes that emerged from consultati­ons Ottawa held over the last year, and that the lack of a work-life balance was raised a lot.

“People were saying things have to be fairer, things have to be more predictabl­e and we need time . . . to spend with our families,” Hajdu said.

Any change to provide more work-life balance or new job protection­s will target the most precarious workers in federally-regulated fields, she said.

“Ultimately, at the end of the day, the code is there to protect the most vulnerable in the workplace,” Hajdu said.

Standards enshrined in the Canada Labour Code were originally drafted in the 1960s in an era when the average worker had a full-time, permanent job with benefits. But the code is feeling the strain under a shifting labour force that since the 1970s has been increasing­ly marked by what is described as non-standard work — usually part-time, temporary or contract work.

Federal officials wrote in a consultati­on paper last year that some of the labour code’s provisions are basically out of date.

A summary report of the consultati­ons was released last week and showed a tension between labour groups that wanted more stringent rules, and employer groups that wanted more flexibilit­y to adapt to changing labour market dynamics.

Experts also felt the right set of rules could unlock economic potential, but also cautioned about a one-sizefits-all approach.

The labour code affects more than 900,000 federal workers in Canada, representi­ng about six per cent of the national workforce.

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