On November 28, 2017, Ontario’s Bill 148, the Fair Workplaces, Better Jobs Act, 2017, received royal assent. What this means is that major changes are on the horizon for all provincially-regulated workplaces in Ontario.
More specifically, in addition to amending Ontario’s Labour Relations Act and Ontario’s Occupational Health and Safety Act, Bill 148 will amend Ontario’s Employment Standards Act, 2000 (ESA), which establishes the minimum rights and obligations of provincially-regulated employees and employers in Ontario. These minimums cannot be contracted out of. Accordingly, Ontario employers are urged to take note of these changes to ensure they remain in compliance with the law.
Due to the significance of these changes, we will be delivering a series blog posts that will provide a practical overview of the upcoming changes to the ESA. This blog post, the first in the series, summarizes the changes to the ESA’s leaves of absence.
A statutory leave of absence can be understood as an employee’s right to take job-protected time off work in certain situations. As of today’s date, there are nine leaves under the ESA. Bill 148 will modify seven of them. It will also introduce a new type of leave.
Leave | Old Rules | New Rules |
Parental Leave Leave to take care of an employee’s child (once born or after the child first comes into the employee’s care) |
|
|
Critical Illness Leave Leave to support a critically ill child or adult who is a family member |
|
|
Leave | Old Rules | New Rules |
Personal Emergency Leave Leave of up to 10 days per calendar year to deal with a personal emergency |
|
|
Family Medical Leave Leave to care for family members who have a serious medical condition with a significant risk of dying within 26 weeks |
|
|
Crime-Related Child Disappearance Leave Leave following the disappearance of an employee’s child, where disappearance is probably due to a crime |
|
|
Child Death Leave Leave following the death of an employee’s child |
|
|
Pregnancy Loss Leave Available to female employees who have suffered a miscarriage or stillbirth |
|
|
Domestic or Sexual Violence Leave Leave to (1) seek medical attention, (2) obtain services from a victim services organization, (3) obtain professional counselling or (4) seek legal assistance, if an employee or an employee’s child experiences domestic or sexual violence or the threat of domestic or sexual violence |
|
|
To be compliant with the new changes to the ESA’s leave of absence provisions, provincially-regulated employers in Ontario should take steps to:
Next up in our series is an overview of the changes affecting compensation. Stay tuned.