Work 2000
Work 2000
official version of the law: what the legal world would have us believe about itself – is that it is an
impartial, neutral and objective system for resolving social conflict. not always neutral; unbiased
-The Neoclassical:
->labour markets are competitive.
demand for baristas=the supply of baristas when $10 is offered and no worker can ask for more
because the employer can find all workers it needs because everyone wants a job
Replacing workers with machines making unemployment higher
judges should enforce contracts and not approve legislation to protect property rights
-The managerialist:
->workers who are treated well will be more committed to getting the employer’s goal
->employment laws should be at a minimum
->unions and collective trade, unnecessary limitation to managerial privilege and flexibility
->a recognition of unions but right of employers to resist employees’ attempts at unionization
-Federal:
->Canadian Human Rights Act: federal organizations/industries. -post office, airlines, tv, radio,
mining operations
->Canada Labour Code:
1) industrial relations: employment relations that studies employment relations between employers
and employees, labour/trade unions, employer organizations
2) Occupational Health & Safety: Exhaustive field concerned with safety health, and welfare of people at
work
Employment Equity Act: requires federal in control employers to engage in bold employment
practices to increase the representation of four designated groups: women, people with
disabilities, Aboriginal peoples, and visible minorities
-Code Grounds are race, colour, ethnic origin, sex, gender, age disability etc.
-Trades Union Act (1872): Canada's first labour law, which gave workers the legal right to
associate in trade unions.
negotiate better pay, better working conditions, provide training and give support. 8h labour, 8h
recreation, 8h rest
-Industrial Disputes Investigation Act, 1907
->forbids any strike or lockout until the matters in dispute have been dealt with by a Board of
Conciliation and Investigation, normally applies to disputes in mines, agencies of transport and
communication and certain public utilities. 30-day break period
-Factory acts 1884 (Ontario):
->This Act was important in that it suggested prohibitions on the work activities of children and
women and suggested work hour restrictions for all employees. was very vague and couldn’t be
forced.
-1919 Winnipeg strike: They wanted the right to negotiate, better wages and better working
conditions. 30,000 workers went on strike
criminal code 98: Criminal Code of Canada was a law enacted after the Winnipeg general strike
of 1919 banning "unlawful associations"
->It was used in the 1930s against the Communist Party of Canada.
section 41 immigration act: federal government must: make sure that official language
minorities are thriving, support them in their development, and promote the use of both official
languages all across the country
-2017 changing workplaces: bill 148 act: changing workforce nature and economy
-fight for $15 minimum wage and fairness, 3 weeks vacation, paid sick days, rules that apply to
and respect everyone, take bullying/harassment seriously
Lecture 3: Hiring: Bona Fide Occupational Requirements (BFOR) and
the Meiorin Case
-Ontario human rights code: special programs part 1: designed to relieve hardship or profitable
disadvantages or assist disadvantaged people or groups to try and achieve equal opportunity for
everyone.
->Ontario human rights commission:
1)protecting equal opportunity programs from people who don’t experience disadvantages
-Formal equality: everyone receives similar or same treatment, gender should not be relevant,
ignores historical disadvantages
-Substantive Equality:
->Recognition of inequality fixed in political, social and economic divisions between men &
women, and address inequality.
-Equality means?
->Must comply with OHRC, educate & train employees on policies and procedures
->making sure the job requirements are reasonable and fair
->following the OHRC when making application forms, with interviews and questions; family
status, marital status, sex, & pregnancy
-BFOR: a rule or requirement that is essential to a job and cannot be avoided; discrimination
justifiable in specific work environments:
->employer adopted the standard honestly and believed that it was necessary to the fulfillment
to the work-related purpose & is legitimate
->that the standard is necessary to the accomplishment of the work-related purpose. to show it
is necessary, it must be demonstrated that it is impossible to take in individual employees
sharing characteristics of the applicant without striking excessive burden upon the employer.
-Polite Racism: Disguising a dislike through behaviour that isn’t outwardly harmful or damaging
in appearance
1) Systematic: discriminatory actions like jokes or manipulating rules that deny minority access or
participation
2) Systemic: policies or practices that are part of the structures of an organization and create
disadvantage for racialized individuals.
3) Everyday Racism: racist acts that are present in everyday life and becomes accepted as the normal by
the dominant
4) Cultural Racism: discriminates based on cultural differences between ethnic or racial groups
5) age: to be over 18
7) family status: parent/ child relationship i.e. don’t want to rent a place because they don’t want
children so they say adults only
-Prima facie discrimination: Prima facie case means that it needs serious consideration,
investigation or determination.
Lecture 5: Hiring, Seniority and the Collective Agreement:
seniority: the length of time that an individual has served in a job or worked in an organization.
It can bring higher status, rank, pensions, more likely for promotion & benefits or outweighs to
an employee who has served in an organization for a longer period. Gives workers job security
which is beyond wages or anything else in the 1930’s. It protected their jobs. hiring was done in
favouritism. No guarantee to have that job the next week so seniority was very important
-Seniority: Historical Proof: Favoritism, bias, unpredictable firing, job security, strengthens
unions----->=Foundation of union movement
Seniority limited discrimination , cannot be undermined, cannot be lost for just any rrason. Gives
employee value. it trumps BFOR