Windsor Star

Labour report recommends unpaid personal emergency leave for Ontarians

- JESSICA SMITH CROSS AND ALLISON JONES The Canadian Press

TORONTO All Ontario workers should get a week of unpaid personal emergency leave a year, government-appointed experts recommende­d Tuesday, though they stopped short of urging paid sick leave for every employee.

Two labour law experts consulted with workers, unions and businesses for two years on a wide range of work-related issues.

In their report, Changing Workplaces Review, they recommend reforms to collective bargaining, strengthen­ing workplace safety and inspection practices, wage fairness for part-time, casual, temporary, contract and seasonal employees, and increasing paid vacation time to three weeks for employees of longer than five years.

The provincial government has yet to announce which of the report’s recommenda­tions it will follow. Premier Kathleen Wynne said her government is considerin­g the entire report, with the goal of building a society where people can earn a living that allows them to take care of themselves and their families.

“We will be moving forward very soon to address the challenges of the precarious workplace,” said Wynne.

The 173 recommenda­tions do not include extending paid sick leave to all employees, despite workers at public hearings saying it would be a useful protection.

“We heard that the combinatio­n of low income, lack of control over scheduling, lack of benefits such as pensions and health care, personal emergency leave or sick leave, all together or in various combinatio­ns, creates a great deal of uncertaint­y, anxiety, and stress which undermines the quality of life and the physical well-being of a wide swath of workers in our society,” the advisers said in the report.

The report notes that paid sick leave isn’t common and Prince Edward Island is the only province to provide it, with one paid sick day per year for employees with five or more years on the job.

Paid sick leave would be beneficial, but extending personal emergency leave to all employees is a more important first step, they wrote. They also recommend that personal emergency leave be available for victims of domestic violence.

Currently, personal emergency leave is mandatory only from employers with 50 or more employees, and can be used for illness, injury or urgent matters, such as the employee’s babysitter calling in sick.

The advisers recommend bereavemen­t leave be separated from personal emergency leave, with employees given three unpaid days for every applicable family member that dies, with no annual limit. Bereaved parents should also get more time off, the report recommends.

Business groups, including the Ontario Chamber of Commerce, have warned the government making major changes to labour laws could have a negative impact on the province’s economic recovery and lead to job cuts.

The chamber also warned raising the minimum wage to $15 an hour could harm businesses. Raising the minimum wage is not part of the Changing Workplaces Review, however, speculatio­n that government is preparing to do so prompted the warning.

The advisers do recommend phasing out the lower minimum wage for liquor servers and eliminatin­g the exemption of students from the minimum wage law.

The advisers, C. Michael Mitchell and John C. Murray, wrote that employers would “benefit from happier and more productive workplaces,” should the changes be implemente­d and that better enforcemen­t would ensure that responsibl­e law-abiding employers wouldn’t face unfair competitio­n from those skirting the law.

While the advisers wrote that unpredicta­ble work schedules contribute to the precarious­ness of work for many employees, they did not recommend specific provisions.

They also recommend the government “initiate an urgent study on how to provide at least a minimum standard of insured health benefits across workplaces, especially to those full-time and parttime employees currently without coverage, and to the self-employed, including small employers.”

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