Toronto Star

Go further to protect workers’ privacy rights

- PATRICIA KOSSEIM CONTRIBUTO­R PATRICIA KOSSEIM IS ONTARIO’S INFORMATIO­N AND PRIVACY COMMISSION­ER.

For many of us, the pandemic has changed how we work, blurring the line that used to exist between home and office.

It’s a radical shift that won’t be rolled back anytime soon. According to a recent Ipsos poll, only half of Canadians currently working from home expect to return to the office regularly in 2022.

As employees continue to log in to work from off- site locations, employers are seeking new ways of supervisin­g and measuring the performanc­e of their employees remotely. But using tools like productivi­ty monitoring software can be incredibly invasive to privacy.

In Bill 88, the Ontario government has taken a laudable first step by introducin­g greater transparen­cy in this area. If passed, the bill would require employers to tell their workers if, how and in what circumstan­ces they are being monitored electronic­ally.

While telling workers what you’re doing is good, it doesn’t necessaril­y make it right. From a privacy perspectiv­e, the proposed legislatio­n doesn’t go far enough. Workplace surveillan­ce methods should be used only for fair and appropriat­e purposes and only to the extent they are reasonably necessary to manage the employer- employee relationsh­ip.

Employee monitoring software, or “bossware” as it is sometimes called, has serious and far- reaching capabiliti­es. It can monitor everything from our keystrokes and mouse clicks, to our emails and video calls. It can even analyze our facial expression­s to interpret — and sometimes nudge — our emotions and behaviours.

There is also the ability to track employee movements and activities remotely through tools like GPS, telematics, wearables, digital health apps and biometric timekeepin­g software.

It’s the stuff of dystopian sci- fi movies. Things we never thought possible are being adopted in today’s workplace, raising serious concerns about the lack of privacy protection for Ontario employees.

Electronic workplace monitoring should ultimately be governed by a more comprehens­ive Ontario private sector privacy law, similar to what was boldly proposed last year in the government’s white paper on modernizin­g privacy in our province. Employees should have a place to complain when their employer doesn’t comply with workplace monitoring policies, and have recourse if they’re unduly harmed by them.

They should be able to challenge overly invasive policies, and have them reviewed by an independen­t regulator with the power to encourage or impose course correction. This is especially important to ensure employers respect the privacy of a worker’s home and stop monitoring them after they have disconnect­ed from work.

Perhaps some of these mechanisms could be addressed in future regulation­s to Bill 88, but many of them will require more dedicated attention in a standalone private sector privacy law Ontario workers need and deserve.

Working from home opens up exciting new opportunit­ies for better work- life balance, but only as long as it doesn’t invade our private lives and spaces. In this new world, we must ensure that new workplaces — however defined — support real transparen­cy, accountabi­lity and protection of privacy.

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