Aside from the enormous health-related challenges due to the COVID-19 virus, employers and workers are feeling major economic pain with job loss, reduced income and revenue. The ability of businesses to adjust quickly will be key to stabilizing the economy and laying the foundation for recovery.
So far, as the Trudeau government’s massive emergency aid package became law on Wednesday, many of the policy responses from governments across Canada seek to stabilize income, an appropriate response to the economic downturn. However, other gaps in policy exist including in the body of law relating to job layoffs including temporary layoffs.
Employment standards legislation in Canada varies by province and at the federal level. In general, temporary layoffs are allowed, though they are subject to varying notice requirements and maximum timelines when the employee is laid off.
Some provinces allow layoffs without notice in “exceptional circumstances” but there’s uncertainty whether the COVID crisis will be considered “exceptional.” There’s also uncertainty around how government-ordered shutdowns affect layoffs.
While no one wants working Canadians to become unemployed, employers must be able to quickly adjust to today’s rapidly changing circumstances to ensure their solvency and viability. Their ability to adjust now, in the face of liquidity and solvency concerns, may in fact determine whether jobs will still exist on the other side of this pandemic. While it may seem counterintuitive to some, strengthening the ability of employers to temporarily lay off employees may ultimately save jobs.
So because the ability to quickly reduce workforces where necessary is key, some of the rules—both provincial and federal—may need adjusting in this time of crisis.
For example, in a 2016 ruling, the Ontario Court of Appeal stated that (absent an agreement to the contrary) employers have no right to temporarily lay off employees. Even in normal circumstances, this decision severely hampers an employer’s ability to make workforce adjustments. However, in today’s wildly uncertain environment, it could stand as a major roadblock to necessary changes. Governments must consider both employers and employees when reacting to COVID and affects.
Fortunately, some jurisdictions have already recognized this and are taking steps to provide employers more flexibility. New Brunswick, for example, has suspended the requirement for employers to give notice if layoffs are due to COVID. Meanwhile, the state of California has suspended elements of its legislation that require 60-days notice for layoffs, citing extraordinary circumstances that have necessitated “rapid changes in workforce needs.”
While these temporary suspensions are a step in the right direction, governments in Canada should specifically legislate on the layoff issue, to update employment legislation in the context of COVID and, in the process, overrule common law decisions (including the Ontario Court of Appeal decision) currently holding up temporary layoffs.
Moreover, provinces could amend provincial employment standards legislation to specifically allow temporary layoffs due to COVID. Amendments could also explicitly empower employers to make necessary adjustments to their workforces and expand maximum timelines for temporary layoffs. Employers need a clear straightforward process. These policy reforms would be consistent with the government initiatives already announced, which aim to provide businesses with flexibility and ease cashflow demands. (These changes could also happen at the federal level, although the Canada Labour Code only applies to a relatively small number of workers, meaning individual provincial action is required.)
To be clear, ensuring the stability of income for workers is also a critical goal in stabilizing the economy and setting the stage for recovery. Recent expansions to employment insurance have increased both benefits and eligibility for workers, helping to ensure those who face job loss or reduction in work receive proper income support.
Allowing employers to adjust quickly will help with solvency concerns and improve the chances that those jobs will be there waiting for returning workers when the crisis subsides. In this extraordinary time of uncertainty, high regulatory and severance costs alongside legislative uncertainty will exacerbate an already bad situation. Amending provincial and federal labour laws to provide businesses with more flexibility to adjust to rapidly changing circumstances is essential to protect against insolvencies and bankruptcies during this crisis, for the benefit or employers and employees alike.
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Employers must be allowed to temporarily lay off workers during COVID crisis
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Aside from the enormous health-related challenges due to the COVID-19 virus, employers and workers are feeling major economic pain with job loss, reduced income and revenue. The ability of businesses to adjust quickly will be key to stabilizing the economy and laying the foundation for recovery.
So far, as the Trudeau government’s massive emergency aid package became law on Wednesday, many of the policy responses from governments across Canada seek to stabilize income, an appropriate response to the economic downturn. However, other gaps in policy exist including in the body of law relating to job layoffs including temporary layoffs.
Employment standards legislation in Canada varies by province and at the federal level. In general, temporary layoffs are allowed, though they are subject to varying notice requirements and maximum timelines when the employee is laid off.
Some provinces allow layoffs without notice in “exceptional circumstances” but there’s uncertainty whether the COVID crisis will be considered “exceptional.” There’s also uncertainty around how government-ordered shutdowns affect layoffs.
While no one wants working Canadians to become unemployed, employers must be able to quickly adjust to today’s rapidly changing circumstances to ensure their solvency and viability. Their ability to adjust now, in the face of liquidity and solvency concerns, may in fact determine whether jobs will still exist on the other side of this pandemic. While it may seem counterintuitive to some, strengthening the ability of employers to temporarily lay off employees may ultimately save jobs.
So because the ability to quickly reduce workforces where necessary is key, some of the rules—both provincial and federal—may need adjusting in this time of crisis.
For example, in a 2016 ruling, the Ontario Court of Appeal stated that (absent an agreement to the contrary) employers have no right to temporarily lay off employees. Even in normal circumstances, this decision severely hampers an employer’s ability to make workforce adjustments. However, in today’s wildly uncertain environment, it could stand as a major roadblock to necessary changes. Governments must consider both employers and employees when reacting to COVID and affects.
Fortunately, some jurisdictions have already recognized this and are taking steps to provide employers more flexibility. New Brunswick, for example, has suspended the requirement for employers to give notice if layoffs are due to COVID. Meanwhile, the state of California has suspended elements of its legislation that require 60-days notice for layoffs, citing extraordinary circumstances that have necessitated “rapid changes in workforce needs.”
While these temporary suspensions are a step in the right direction, governments in Canada should specifically legislate on the layoff issue, to update employment legislation in the context of COVID and, in the process, overrule common law decisions (including the Ontario Court of Appeal decision) currently holding up temporary layoffs.
Moreover, provinces could amend provincial employment standards legislation to specifically allow temporary layoffs due to COVID. Amendments could also explicitly empower employers to make necessary adjustments to their workforces and expand maximum timelines for temporary layoffs. Employers need a clear straightforward process. These policy reforms would be consistent with the government initiatives already announced, which aim to provide businesses with flexibility and ease cashflow demands. (These changes could also happen at the federal level, although the Canada Labour Code only applies to a relatively small number of workers, meaning individual provincial action is required.)
To be clear, ensuring the stability of income for workers is also a critical goal in stabilizing the economy and setting the stage for recovery. Recent expansions to employment insurance have increased both benefits and eligibility for workers, helping to ensure those who face job loss or reduction in work receive proper income support.
Allowing employers to adjust quickly will help with solvency concerns and improve the chances that those jobs will be there waiting for returning workers when the crisis subsides. In this extraordinary time of uncertainty, high regulatory and severance costs alongside legislative uncertainty will exacerbate an already bad situation. Amending provincial and federal labour laws to provide businesses with more flexibility to adjust to rapidly changing circumstances is essential to protect against insolvencies and bankruptcies during this crisis, for the benefit or employers and employees alike.
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Alex Whalen
Director, Atlantic Canada Prosperity, Fraser Institute
Niels Veldhuis
President, Fraser Institute
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