Your Legal Rights Following Your Canadian Job Loss
I Just Lost My Job - Now What?
Constance
Olsheski, Lang Michener LLP
This article originally appeared on Monster.ca
After the news of the economic crisis subsides the next
headline to dominate the news will be the job losses being experienced in this
recession. 500,000 in the auto industry, and 100,000s more in other
industries.
There are two separate sets of laws that protect you if you
have been terminated because of restructuring or cost cutting, or for any other
reason, other than for cause. The first are those identified in the Employment Standards
Act of Ontario,
or the employment standards legislation in every other
province. In Ontario,
(with similar provisions in other provinces’ legislation) a terminated employee
is to be provided with the following:
- One week of notice (or payment in lieu of notice) for every
year work, to a maximum of eight (8) weeks, plus your full benefits for this
period; and
- If you have been employed for over five years and if your
employer has a payroll of over $2.5 Million, then you are entitled to a further
week of severance pay for each year worked to a maximum of 26 weeks; and
- You are of course entitled to outstanding wages, overtime
pay, vacation pay commissions.
If your employer has not honoured these payments then you can either have a
lawyer pursue them or your behalf or you can file a claim, under the act,
yourself. If you pursue it yourself you are limited to a $10,000 claim, and
cannot then pursue your employer for anything owed in excess of $10,000.
The other set of laws that apply once you are terminated is
the common law, which is pursued through the civil courts. This can necessitate
the initiation of a lawsuit, but with over 95% of cases settling before a trial,
the risk of a lawsuit is not quite as intimidating as it may initially
appear.
The principles of common law states that each individual is
entitled to his/her own notice period, or payment in lieu of notice, or
severance (all essentially the same legal right) despite what other individuals
have been provided or denied. A judge in assessing the severance to which you
are legally entitled will make a subjective determination based on many factors,
including the number of years you worked with your employer; whether you were
induced to accept employment and thus forfeited otherwise secure employment at
your previous job; your age; your position; your compensation; your
responsibilities; and the likelihood in the current marketplace of you finding
alternative employment. Judges frequently award employees approximately one
month per year for each year of employment, but that can be higher depending on
your particular set of circumstances. It is rarely lower.
Even though terminated, you can still also pursue other
outstanding issues in the civil action, including payment for overtime, any
unfulfilled promises for bonuses, commissions, car allowance, the benefits you
enjoyed as an employee, further contributions to your RRSO and/or pension, and
in some cases damages for mental distress.
Although it may initially appear expensive, it may well be
worth it to seek legal assistance to obtain the full amount owed to you
following your termination. Not only will you get what you are legally owed, in
many cases, lawyers can obtain payment in whole or in part for your legal
fees.
The laws regarding the assistance to someone who is
terminated are there to ensure that you have a reasonable and fair financial
bridge to your new employment. Don’t hesitate to cross that bridge.
Don’t
leave your future to chance, let a leading expert assess your case. Contact us
at 416-307-4019.
|