Montreal Gazette

Ontario consults on gender wage gap law

BUSINESS INPUT

- ALLISON JONES

TORONTO• Ontario is gathering feedback on legislatio­n aimed at eliminatin­g the gender wage gap, including asking businesses how onerous pay transparen­cy reporting would be.

The Progressiv­e Conservati­ve government paused implementa­tion last year of a law from the previous Liberal government that would require all publicly advertised job postings to include a salary rate or range, bar employers from asking about past compensati­on, prohibit reprisal against employees who discuss compensati­on and require large employers to track and report compensati­on gaps.

Based on the most recent data from Statistics Canada, the gender wage gap accounting for the annual earnings of all workers is 29.3 per cent, meaning that women earn about 71 cents for every dollar that men earn. The gap for annual earnings of full-year, full-time workers is 22.6 per cent, as more women than men are in part-time work. And when using hourly wage rates, the gap is 11.3 per cent.

Labour Minister Laurie Scott said the Liberals passed the legislatio­n right before the election without any consultati­ons, and she said people affected by the law wanted an opportunit­y to be heard.

“We’re committed to closing the gender wage gap,” she said in an interview. “I think taking the time and listening to the many stakeholde­rs about how to do it properly — and how to have, in some cases, interestin­g ideas that we haven’t heard of on how to address the gender wage gap — is valuable.”

Under the law, employers with 100 or more employees would have to calculate their wage gaps and report that informatio­n.

The consultati­on questions ask the best way to calculate the wage gap, including if bonuses, overtime pay and commission­s should be involved, what the reporting periods should be, and how much time and money it would take to meet reporting requiremen­ts.

“If you are an employer with 100 or more employees, how much do you estimate the cost of pay transparen­cy reporting will be,” such as IT, software and personnel costs, the consultati­on paper asks.

“How many hours do you anticipate pay transparen­cy reporting will take in total?”

NDP Leader Andrea Horwath said she is insulted by the questions, and all women should be, too.

“What the message is with that kind of a survey and that kind of a question is that I guess this government believes that pay equity for women is red tape and there’s no need to ensure that women have pay equity,” she said.

“If we’re ever going to get to a place where we have pay equity we need to know what the numbers are.”

Scott defended the questions, saying she wants companies to be able to report their wage gap numbers.

“I don’t want it to be onerous, but we want as much participat­ion as we can get,” she said.

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