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Dofo is Gutting Labour Laws, Eliinating Sick Days and Cancelling Raises for Min. Wage

Charlemagne

Well-known member
Jul 19, 2017
15,451
2,484
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Doug Ford is Gutting Labour Laws, Eliminating Sick Days and Cancelling Raises for Minimum Wage Workers

Doug Ford ran for office under the slogan: ‘For the People’

October 23, 2018

Doug Ford’s government announced Tuesday it is tabling sweeping legislation to gut Ontario’s labour laws.

At a press conference Tuesday in Scarborough, Labour Minister Laurie Scott announced Ford’s government is officially moving forward with omnibus legislation repealing Bill 148, the “fair workplaces and better jobs act” which modernized the province’s outdated labour laws and included protections for vulnerable workers.

Under the Ford government’s proposed legislation, workers will lose paid sick days, labour laws will be gutted to restore exploitative practices and make it harder for workers to unionize, and to top it all off, Ford’s government is planning to cancel the $15 minimum wage increase set for January 1 – a move that will cost low-wage workers nearly $2,000 per year.

Many of the changes to Ontario’s labour laws announced Tuesday have been actively pushed by business lobbyists.

In a statement, the Ontario Federation of Labour and Fight for $15 and Fairness campaign said Ford’s move to cancel the minimum wage increase reveals the empty hypocrisy of his “For the People” campaign slogan.

“In addition to cutting the minimum wage, the government is also planning to repeal two meager paid sick days, right to equal pay for equal work as well as fairer scheduling rules,” the groups said.

“By taking away these basic protections that put more money in the pockets of low wage workers, the government will hurt women, workers of colour and newcomers the most.”

Here’s a few of the key changes announced by Ford’s government Tuesday:

Personal emergency leave

Before: Bill 148 guaranteed all workers 10 “personal emergency leave days” for illness, injury or other emergencies each year, including two paid days of leave.

Now: Ford’s government is repealing paid sick days and reducing emergency leave from 10 days to three sick days, two bereavement days and three days for family responsibilities. Ford is also changing the law to give employers the power to demand evidence that workers aren’t faking an illness to get unpaid leave.

Employee misclassification

Before: In a move to crack down on precarious work and other exploitative practices, Bill 148 prohibited employers from misclassifying their workers as self-employed “independent contractors.”

Now: Ford’s government says it is “repealing the requirement for the employer to prove that an individual is not an employee,” making it more difficult to prove if an employer is misclassifying its workers.

Equal pay for equal work

Before: To address workplace discrimination and the rise of precarious work, Bill 148 prohibited employers from paying one worker less than another if they are doing substantially the same job and use the same skills (with exceptions for seniority or performance pay).

After: Ford’s government will repeal equal pay provisions based on employment status, effectively opening the door to employers relying on cheap, precarious labour to do the same work as full-time employees for less pay.

Scheduling

Before: Bill 148 protected workers, particularly in the service sector, by guaranteeing greater predictability and work-life balance. It required employers to pay workers three hours of wages if they cancel shifts last minute and gave workers the right to decline last minute shift changes. It also gave workers the right to request changes to their schedules or work locations after three months.

After: Ford’s government will deny workers compensation for shifts cancelled last minute, strip them of their ability to decline last minute shift changes and allow employers to require workers to be on-call even on their days off. Workers will also no longer have the right to request changes to their schedule or work location.

Unionization

Before: Bill 148 introduced a number of changes to Ontario’s labour laws, including repealing restrictions on card-based union certification in building services, home care and temporary help agencies, requiring employers share lists of workers with unions and make first contract arbitration easier.

After: Ford’s government is ending several provisions that removed barriers put in place to make it harder for workers to unionize, including repealing card-based certification in several industries, repealing rules requiring employers to share lists of workers with unions and repealing provisions to speed up the process for first contracts.

Raising the Minimum Wage

Before: In an effort to reverse the trend of stagnating wages and restore purchasing power to workers in low-wage jobs, Ontario was scheduled to increase the minimum wage from $14 per hour to $15 per hour on January 1, 2019.

After: Ford’s government is cancelling the minimum wage increase and freezing the minimum wage at $14 for nearly three years, costing low-wage workers nearly $2,000 per year in lost wages.

https://pressprogress.ca/doug-ford-is-gutting-labour-laws-eliminating-sick-days-and-cancelling-raises-for-minimum-wage-workers/?fbclid=IwAR2HNPnhW7tMyO9srhYfEtVi3a2hgCMC0pl5T35Muw-D-AxoPYp1gN0yv6w
 

Orion1027

Member
Jan 10, 2017
482
3
18
......how people exaggerate!!! It was fine when Wynne tipped the the other way and made business owners suffer by constantly increasing the their costs. Remember something and try to understand this, not all business owners are Apple or Amazon, they are small businesses owners who offer have personal lines of credit or have taken our mortgages on their homes in order to operate. 15 years of Wynne & Co. saw increase in WSIB rates, employer health tax, eco fees, carbon tax, increased fees on everything and the. She tops it off with massive wage increases along with a plethora of paid days off, standby wages and the like. Ford just tried to even the playing field a bit, this isn’t a return to Dickensian times.
 

K Douglas

Half Man Half Amazing
Jan 5, 2005
26,247
6,521
113
Room 112
I'm sure small businesses are pleased with this repeal. Small businesses are the job creators. We need them to succeed.
 

Bud Plug

Sexual Appliance
Aug 17, 2001
5,069
0
0
The most offensive impact of Bill 148 was in unionized workplaces. It created additional benefits for those who already had excellent benefits, all because the Liberals rushed the legislation through without taking into account how it would play out in different types of employment. The legislation is not easily fixed with some minor tinkering. Best to scrap it entirely.

Beyond this problem, some of the provisions rest on concepts that are false (the idea that part time employees are just as productive and efficient as full time employees - something that even trade unions have recognized IS NOT true for quite some time).
 

Anbarandy

Bitter House****
Apr 27, 2006
10,120
2,768
113
Small businesses were either closing up shop, moving to the USA, losing money hand over fist, laying off workers and thus hurting the very workers that Bill 148 was supposed to protect and benefit. Well, this is what Dog Ford and his henchmen have stated. However, there has not been any evidence to substantiate their claims.

So taking away the protections and benefits of Bill 148 actually helps workers because there will be more low paying jobs, with less protections and benefits offered by business owners who are incapable of running a business NOT predicated upon low wages and predatory labor practices.
 

james t kirk

Well-known member
Aug 17, 2001
23,939
3,701
113
"Gutting the labour laws"

That's a funny one.

Call me when he evens the playing field with respect to unions. Until then, there is nothing to see here.
 

bver_hunter

Well-known member
Nov 5, 2005
27,486
5,675
113
A lot more to come from this Dumb DOFO individual who was not very transparent with his Political Platform during the elections. So he targets the lowest paid individuals, all for supposedly benefiting the people of Ontario.
So now if a full time employee is sick, then he will not be paid. Terrible, and no doubt next on the cards there will be other benefits like vacation pay that maybe reduced as well.
 

danmand

Well-known member
Nov 28, 2003
46,353
4,778
113
A lot more to come from this Dumb DOFO individual who was not very transparent with his Political Platform during the elections. So he targets the lowest paid individuals, all for supposedly benefiting the people of Ontario.
So now if a full time employee is sick, then he will not be paid. Terrible, and no doubt next on the cards there will be other benefits like vacation pay that maybe reduced as well.
He is a populist fraud just like Trump is. How these guys manage to convince the poor people to vote for them, is the biggest irony in politics.

It is well known, that homeless people and people otherwise on welfare, generally vote conservative 'cause when they get rich, they do not want their tax dollars spent on sorry asses like themselves. It is somewhat frustrating for the people who help them.
 

Orion1027

Member
Jan 10, 2017
482
3
18
He is a populist fraud just like Trump is. How these guys manage to convince the poor people to vote for them, is the biggest irony in politics.

It is well known, that homeless people and people otherwise on welfare, generally vote conservative 'cause when they get rich, they do not want their tax dollars spent on sorry asses like themselves. It is somewhat frustrating for the people who help them.

Something like what Trudeau did.....lied about everything and sold himself for something he’s not qualified and competent to do the job.
 

bver_hunter

Well-known member
Nov 5, 2005
27,486
5,675
113
He is a populist fraud just like Trump is. How these guys manage to convince the poor people to vote for them, is the biggest irony in politics.

It is well known, that homeless people and people otherwise on welfare, generally vote conservative 'cause when they get rich, they do not want their tax dollars spent on sorry asses like themselves. It is somewhat frustrating for the people who help them.
Hope he has not heard Trump use the "Nationalist" word. He might even call himself a Nationalist!!
 

Orion1027

Member
Jan 10, 2017
482
3
18
I think that you are mistaking Trudeau for Trump!!
No, No, No! I’m talking about Trudeau. He made lots of promises to a lot of people and was dishonest about it.

1: Revenue neutral middle-class tax cut

Trudeau said his middle class tax cut would pay for itself. It hasn’t. The tax cut is costing all Canadians $1.2 billion annually from the federal treasury, a classic case of robbing Peter to pay Paul.

2: Small business tax cut

Trudeau promised to lower the rate from 11% to 9%. He hasn’t.

3: Modest deficits

Trudeau said annual deficits over his first term in office would total $24.1 billion. Last week’s federal budget pegs them at $93.3 billion, an immodest increase of 287%.

4: Balanced budget

Trudeau said the budget would be balanced, with a $1 billion surplus, in 2019-20. Last week’s budget predicts the deficit in 2019-20 will be $20.4 billion, $18.7 billion deficit in 2020-21 and $15.8 billion in 2021-22. It gives no indication of when the budget will be balanced, if ever.

5: Reduce debt-to-GDP ratio

Trudeau promised this ratio, a key indicator of the government’s economic health, would be reduced from 30% to 27% by the end of his first term in office. Last week’s budget replaces this with a vague statement the ratio will be lower in 2020-21 than 2016-17, without specifics.
6: Revenue neutral carbon pricing

Trudeau said his carbon pricing plan would be revenue neutral for the federal government. This was misleading because his government is not lowering other federal taxes to offset new federal revenues gained from carbon pricing, which is the definition of revenue neutrality. Instead, Trudeau has set a mandatory national carbon price for provincial governments to implement, with no requirement that their carbon pricing schemes must be revenue neutral for them.

7: Reduce industrial greenhouse gas emissions

Before the 2015 election, Trudeau and the Liberals said then prime minister Stephen Harper’s proposed emission cuts were inadequate. Post-election, Climate Change Minister Catherine McKenna said they were the “floor” on which the Liberals would build. Today, Harper’s floor is Trudeau’s ceiling since he hasn’t changed Harper’s targets.

8: Electoral reform

Trudeau said the 2015 election would be the last using “first past the post” balloting and would be replaced with some form of proportional representation. He has abandoned this promise.

9: Open and transparent government

The opposition parties complain Trudeau is proposing to reduce weekly parliamentary sittings from five days to four (eliminating Fridays), appear only one day a week to answer their questions, limit their power to delay legislation and give the government more time to answer their written inquiries.

10: Restore home mail delivery

Trudeau’s government is studying the issue, but his promise appears to have been downsized to not cutting home mail delivery any further, rather than restoring previous cuts.

In total he’s reneged on 41 of 208 promises, hasn’t forgotten another 41......say anything just to get elected.
 

bver_hunter

Well-known member
Nov 5, 2005
27,486
5,675
113
No, No, No! I’m talking about Trudeau. He made lots of promises to a lot of people and was dishonest about it.
Will just respond to your first few statements. Trump is 4000 times more dishonest. a fact!!

1: Revenue neutral middle-class tax cut

Trudeau said his middle class tax cut would pay for itself. It hasn’t. The tax cut is costing all Canadians $1.2 billion annually from the federal treasury, a classic case of robbing Peter to pay Paul.
Trump said that his tax cuts will generate more revenue and will pay for the tax cuts. False, as they now have the worst budget deficit.

2: Small business tax cut

Trudeau promised to lower the rate from 11% to 9%. He hasn’t.
False. He promised to get it down to 9% by 2019. They have dropped it to 10%.

3: Modest deficits

Trudeau said annual deficits over his first term in office would total $24.1 billion. Last week’s federal budget pegs them at $93.3 billion, an immodest increase of 287%.
Trump's year in office and an increase of over a trillion dollars in deficits.

4: Balanced budget

Trudeau said the budget would be balanced, with a $1 billion surplus, in 2019-20. Last week’s budget predicts the deficit in 2019-20 will be $20.4 billion, $18.7 billion deficit in 2020-21 and $15.8 billion in 2021-22. It gives no indication of when the budget will be balanced, if ever.
All PM's talked about balanced budgets. Harper said that there would not be a deficit. But the deficit under his reign was close to $200billion.
Trump's deficit is projected to hit $7 trillion if he continues with stuff like border wall funding etc. Do not forget that Mexico were supposed to pay for the Wall. Another big, big lie!!
 

Orion1027

Member
Jan 10, 2017
482
3
18
All PM's talked about balanced budgets. Harper said that there would not be a deficit. But the deficit under his reign was close to $200billion.
Trump's deficit is projected to hit $7 trillion if he continues with stuff like border wall funding etc. Do not forget that Mexico were supposed to pay for the Wall. Another big, big lie!!
How did Trump enter the conversation?????? Trudeau ran on these promises and broke them all, you denying it won’t change the fact that he went back on his word.....typical liberal bullshit
 

Butler1000

Well-known member
Oct 31, 2011
28,835
3,482
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Butler1000

Well-known member
Oct 31, 2011
28,835
3,482
113
How did Trump enter the conversation?????? Trudeau ran on these promises and broke them all, you denying it won’t change the fact that he went back on his word.....typical liberal bullshit
Trump has been a god send distraction to the antics of Trudeau.
 

oldjones

CanBarelyRe Member
Aug 18, 2001
24,495
11
38
How did Trump enter the conversation?????? Trudeau ran on these promises and broke them all, you denying it won’t change the fact that he went back on his word.....typical liberal bullshit
You ignoring the bit about Harper's broken 'no deficits' promise to focus on Trump won't change the fact that he went back on his word …… typical conservative bullshit.

Funny thing is, every last one of them runs on promises they cannot keep, and idiots still come along later and slag them for it. Look in the mirror, there's another BS-believer. Arguing about the particular flavour of the shit lets the guys dumping on us get away with it.
 

Nathan 88

Well-known member
Feb 1, 2017
750
462
63
The funny thing about this is that a lot of the idiots who voted for Ford will now have their benefits reduced.
I guess they will be rethinking their vote in the next election.
 

danmand

Well-known member
Nov 28, 2003
46,353
4,778
113
The funny thing about this is that a lot of the idiots who voted for Ford will now have their benefits reduced.
I guess they will be rethinking their vote in the next election.
Don't count on it. They are not able to see the connection.
 
Ashley Madison
Toronto Escorts