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Changing Workplaces Mean Changing Workplace Legislation in Alberta

Workplace

Across Canada, laws governing the workplace have been changing to keep up with evolving norms, including an increasing need to balance work and family life, among other modern realities. As we reported last year, here in Alberta, a significant transformation was the introduction of the Fair and Family-Friendly Workplaces Act (the Act) whose changes took effect on January 1, 2018. As of this year, new employment standards are in place province-wide, intended to help employees and their families, and will impact both employers and employees going forward.

The Fair and Family-Friendly Workplaces Act

The Act was introduced after a review of existing legislation and using input collected from industry, business, unions, non-profits, and the public. Between March 13 and April 18, 2017 more than 7,000 submissions were received by the Alberta government. All this feedback was reviewed as part of the development of the Act.

Prior to the introduction of the Act, Alberta’s workplace legislation had not been significantly updated in more than 30 years. The Act recognizes that the nature of both work and family life has drastically changed since then and makes significant amendments to the province’s existing Employment Standards Code and Labour Relations Code.

The Minister of Labour said that:

Albertans deserve fair and family-friendly workplaces that support a strong economy and ensure they can take care of their loved ones. After nearly 30 years of inaction by the previous government, Alberta’s laws were out of date and out of step with the rest of Canada. I’m proud that our government brought forward these modern, fair and balanced laws that protect the rights of hard-working Albertans, support their families and help businesses stay competitive.

The amendments provide Albertans with the same rights and protections of employees in other jurisdictions across Canada, and includes a number of family-friendly provisions.

Major changes include expanded compassionate care provisions, important changes to maternity and parental leave, newly introduced leaves (including domestic violence leave and others), changes to termination, and a new penalty system for employees. .

Key Changes to the Employment Standards Code

Alberta’s amended Employment Standards Code came into effect January 1, 2018 with a number of key changes, the most important of which we remind our readers of below:

Compassionate Care Leave

Parents of critically ill or injured children or individuals who must care for gravely-ill family members will now be able to take time off to care for them without fearing that they will be fired:

Maternity and Parental Leave

The new Code has lowered the threshold for maternity leave and provided for the extension of parental leave to allow for greater flexibility for working families and to align Alberta’s leave policies with federal EI guidelines:

Other Leaves

The new Code provides for a number of other types of leave, to be taken unpaid. Employees are eligible for such leave after 90 days of employment. These leaves include:

A number of other leaves were also introduced in the new Code.

Terminations

There has been some clarification of the rules around termination. Under the new Code:

More information about these and changes under the Act can be found here.

If you are an employer or an employee and have questions about how these changes will impact you, contact HMC Lawyers. We are committed to providing both employers and employees with forward-thinking guidance intended to manage and mitigate risk and benefit their workplace relationships. We have more than 130 years of cumulative litigation experience providing insightful advice to our clients about employment standards, human rights, and other legal matters related to work. We strive to resolve challenging workplace disputes with a minimum disruption to relationships, wherever possible.  To speak with a member of our Employment Team, call 1-800-480-3534 or contact us online.

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