Toronto Star

Province halts new workplace probes

Proactive inspection­s that target wage theft, other violations on hold amid spending freeze

- SARA MOJTEHEDZA­DEH WORK AND WEALTH REPORTER

The Ministry of Labour has instructed staff not to initiate any new proactive inspection­s aimed at preventing wage theft and other employment standards violations, according to an internal memo obtained by the Star — a day after the Progressiv­e Conservati­ve government introduced a bill that will significan­tly roll back recently enacted labour protection­s.

The memo, signed by the ministry’s acting director of employment stan- dards, Joe Boeswald, says that as of Sept. 3, staff should “not initiate any new inspection­s.” It also says the ministry will defer inspection and prosecutio­n training for staff who have not yet received it.

Employment standards inspection­s deal with basic workplace issues such as unpaid wages and overtime. Proactive inspection­s, which are initiated at the behest of the ministry, are far more effective at recovering unpaid wages, including public holiday pay and overtime, than when individual workers file complaints, according to the ministry’s own data.

Andrew Langille, an employment and labour lawyer with East Toronto Community Legal Services, called the move “very troubling.”

“Inspection­s are important because they are the backbone of enforcemen­t of the (Employment Standards Act),” he said.

“It’s really the only way to detect widespread violations of the minimum social standards other than employees reporting violations themselves,” Langille said.

According to the memo dated Aug. 30, the move is motivated by a significan­t backlog of employment standards claims filed by workers — exacerbate­d by a “discretion­ary spending freeze and subsequent suspension of recruitmen­t” at the ministry.

In response to questions from the Star, a ministry spokespers­on said the “measures taken are temporary and will be re-evaluated as wait times decrease.”

“The Ministry of Labour continues to identify and conduct proactive Health and Safety inspection­s and other safety initiative­s on specific industry sectors to raise awareness and help prevent injuries and fatalities,” spokespers­on Janet Deline said in an email.

“We also continue to conduct reactive investigat­ions in response to workplace fatalities, critical injuries, work refusals and complaints.”

“Any inspection­s that are underway will be completed in the normal manner,” she added.

As first reported by the Star, a commitment by the Liberals to double its complement of employment standards inspectors by hiring 175 new staff was iced after the Conservati­ves were elected in June.

The memo says to deal with increased wait times, inspectors will have to focus on claims and should not initiate any new inspection­s. The memo does not specify for how long.

Bill 47, introduced in the legislatur­e Tuesday, will repeal other Liberal measures meant to tackle precarious work, including a minimum wage bump, sick days and equal pay provisions for temporary workers.

It also reduces the maximum penalties for employers who break the law.

Responding to worker claims could still require inspectors to visit workplaces, but the memo means all future proactive blitzes — for example, of high-risk sectors like temp agencies — are on hold.

Last year, the government recovered only one-third of the wages owed to individual workers after they filed claims, according to documents obtained by the Star through a Freedom of Informatio­n request.

Since 2013, this low recovery rate has resulted in some $28 million in missing wages for workers, according to 2016 research conducted by York University academics Leah Vosko and Eric Tucker, based on ministry data. The recovery rate when the ministry inspected workplaces was almost 100 per cent.

“There’s a major problem when it comes to detecting infraction­s for workers who remain in the workplace,” said Langille. “There’s a fear of reprisal, which is quite a live issue that I see in my practice quite extensivel­y,” he said, adding that workers often have a “poor understand­ing” of their rights and the claims process.

Vosko and Tucker’s research found that more than 90 per cent of the approximat­ely 15,000 annual employment standards complaints are filed by people who have left or lost their jobs.

The Star has reported extensivel­y on wage theft and other enforcemen­t issues across the province.

A 2016 report by two independen­t experts commission­ed by the Ministry of Labour to review the province’s workplace standards also found that Ontario faces “serious” and extensive problems enforcing basic employment rights.

“We conclude that there is a serious problem with enforcemen­t of (Employment Standards Act) provisions,” the report reads.

“While most employers likely comply or try to comply with the ESA, we conclude that there are too many people in too many workplaces who do not receive their basic rights.”

Ministry blitzes in the past regularly found violations in more than 75 per cent of workplaces inspected.

Langille said under-resourcing at the Ministry of Labour has been a systemic problem under successive government­s.

“This is an issue that cuts across all government­s,” he said. “This is an enduring problem that the ministry has encountere­d.”

 ?? GRAHAM PAINE METROLAND ?? Protesters gathered in Oakville last week to fight for a $15 minimum wage. The province has taken steps to freeze it at $14.
GRAHAM PAINE METROLAND Protesters gathered in Oakville last week to fight for a $15 minimum wage. The province has taken steps to freeze it at $14.

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