Windsor Star

Ford pledges to eliminate key labour reform bill

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Ontario Premier Doug Ford vowed Tuesday to scrap labour reform legislatio­n from the previous Liberal regime that raised the province’s minimum wage and introduced a range of other worker protection­s, a declaratio­n that came days after his government said the law was under review. Ford’s comments caught the opposition off guard and upset those in the labour community who have been supporters of the law known as Bill 148.

“We’re getting rid of Bill 148,” the premier said in the legislatur­e. “We’re going to make sure we’re competitiv­e around the world.” The Progressiv­e Conservati­ves said last week that they would halt a planned increase to minimum wage set to kick in next year as a result of the Liberal law, and the labour minister said the rest of the legislatio­n was being reviewed. The bill mandates equal pay for part-time and temporary workers doing the same job as full-time employees and increases vacation entitlemen­ts to three weeks after a worker has been with their company for five years. It also requires employees to be paid for three hours if their shift is cancelled within 48 hours of its start, and expands personal emergency leave to 10 days per year, two of them paid. When brought in, the law was applauded by labour activists who had been calling on the government to increase the minimum wage for years. Some businesses, however, complained about the hike in minimum wage — from $11.60 to $14 an hour on Jan. 1 — and raised prices, cut staff hours and reduced employee benefits in response. When asked to clarify his comments about the bill, Ford doubled down on his remarks Tuesday afternoon. “I don’t think this is any surprise,” he said. “I talked about this all throughout the campaign. I went from town to town talking about Bill 148.”

Ford said the bill has hurt Ontario businesses and meant workers lost their jobs. He wouldn’t say if the government planned a full repeal of the bill or changes to part of it, adding that more informatio­n would be available in the coming weeks. “Bottom line, it’s an absolute jobkiller,” he said of the bill. “We want to create more jobs for everyone right across the sector.” NDP Leader Andrea Horwath said it’s not clear just what the government plans to do with the labour reform law. Repealing the legislatio­n will only make life more unstable for workers across the province, she said.

“At the end of the day, dragging us backwards to the days where people couldn’t get three weeks

vacation or they couldn’t get sick time off when they were sick at work, these are things that we worry about,” she said. Interim Liberal Leader John Fraser said the premier’s declaratio­n hurts workers across the province. “It does a disservice to the office to not fully consider the direction you’re going in,” he said. “The premier’s not doing that.”

Pam Frache, the Ontario coordinato­r of the Fight for $15 and Fairness, a group that supports the law, noted that the government has not yet introduced legislatio­n to replace or repeal Bill 148, despite Ford’s comments.

“We still think there’s time for the premier to change his mind, to do the right thing and to stand with the people, not with the corporate elites,” she said. Meanwhile, the Ontario Chamber of Commerce, which represents the province’s business community, said it would like the government to repeal Bill 148. “The very real unintended consequenc­es (of Bill 148) have forced our members to decrease product offerings and increase the price of products being sold, hire fewer employees, reduce services and hours of operation, cut back on employee benefits, and halt capital investment — all in an effort to stay afloat,” president Rocco Rossi said in a statement.

Last year, the Financial Accountabi­lity Office watchdog estimated more than 50,000 people could lose their jobs due to the minimum wage increase.

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