Archive for the ‘Labour and Employment Law’ Category

Love and Marriage? An Employment Law Refresher

This workshop is designed to give participants the tools they need to advise on the hot button employment law issues that they may face through all stages of the employment relationship, given the new developments in the areas of privacy and human rights and damages for wrongful dismissal. This workshop will benefit corporate counsel as well as any practitioner who deals with employment law issues from time to time.

Co-Chairs
Sean M. Kennedy, Senior Regional Counsel, Legal Affairs, Central & Western Regions, Canada Post Corporation
Terrie-Lynne Devonish, Chief Counsel, Aon Canada Inc.
Full Program Agenda
Introductory Remarks 9:00 am

The Courtship: Key Issues Arising in the Pre-hiring Process 9:05 am
• Alcohol and Drug Testing
• Discussion regarding courts and arbitrators in Canada who have generally struck down both
pre and post-employment drug testing in the absence of reasonable grounds
• To what extent and under what circumstances can an employer conduct alcohol and drug tests on prospective and current employees in light of new court decisions permitting drug testing?
• Reference checks
• To what extent can a current or former employer express dissatisfaction when asked to provide a reference for an employee?
Frances L. Fitzgerald, Senior Legal Counsel, Scotiabank Employment Law Group
Darryl R. Hiscocks, McMillan LLP
Arleen V. Huggins, Koskie Minsky LLP

The Marriage: What’s Mine is Yours? 9:45 am
The issue of employee privacy and the scope of an employer’s right to access employee information:
• What is the extent of privacy to which an employee is entitled at the workplace?
• Does the employer have a right to review and seize employee computer data?
• Does an employer have a right to the medical information that forms the basis of an employee’s application for sick leave or disability benefits?
Sean M. Kennedy, Senior Regional Counsel, Canada Post Corporation
Janice P. Rubin, Rubin Thomlinson LLP
Richard J. Charney, Ogilvy Renault LLP

Break 10:45 am

The Divorce: New Developments in Employee Terminations 11:00 am
The evolution of jurisprudence in wrongful dismissal and constructive dismissal:
• The evolution of Wallace v United Grain Growers and its often novel uses in claims for punitive damages
• The recent Supreme Court of Canada decision in Evans v Teamsters and its impact on working notice in the context of constructive dismissal
• The Supreme Court of Canada decision in Keays v Honda
• Tips on “preventative lawyering” to avoid pitfalls leading to wrongful dismissal claims and human rights complaints
Jill C. Schatz, General Counsel, Primus Telecommunications Canada Inc.
Jeffrey Goodman, Heenan Blaikie LLP
Matthew L.O. Certosimo, Borden Ladner Gervais LLP

Lunch 12:15 pm




Brief STINT on Bay St.

STINT

During reading week, Omar Ha-Redeye participated in UWO’s STudent INTership (STINT) program.

He shadowed a Bay St. lawyer in the area of labour/employment law.




U-News in Halifax Considers York Strike

Meghan Harrison of U-News.ca discusses the strike at York University.  U-News.ca is a publication of the senior journalism students at the University of King’s College School of Journalism in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada.

Harrison selects key new stories and websites in her coverage,

Class-action lawsuit by students could have a shot

Slaw – Canadian law weblog
Slaw is a three-year-old collaborative weblog about Canadian law. In this post, Omar Ha-Redeye, a law student at the University of Western Ontario, considers whether or not York students could file a successful class-action lawsuit against York over the strike. The students wouldn’t be without in-house experts, as the strike also affects York’s Osgoode Hall law school. Ha-Redeye points out that a 2001 suit against the school over lost instructional time was unsuccessful because the judge wouldn’t connect lost instructional time to financial losses. “If law students (and others) can indicate that the tight deadlines around legal jobs and licensing requirements do have a direct financial impact, is it possible that the court could rule different in the future?” wonders Ha-Redeye.




A Day at the Grievance Settlement Board

Law students can occasionally follow lawyers during mediations and arbitrations.

On Dec. 15, Omar visited the Grievance Settlement Board in Toronto.

The Grievance Settlement Board provides dispute resolution services to the Crown employers and the trade unions/bargaining agents representing Crown employees in the Ontario Public Service and Crown agencies identified under the Crown Employees Collective Bargaining Act.




Joe Lieberman of Mathews Dinsdale LLP on Labour Law

During a reception in the student lounge Mr. Joe Liberman from Mathews Dinsdale LLP, spoke to a small group of students about labour law.

Omar asked about opportunities in labour law during tough economic times, and the component of health law in labour work in Canada.




The Charter and Human Rights at Work: 25 Years Later

The University of Western Ontario hosted the 2007 Labour Law Conference on October 27, 2007.  The theme was The Charter and Human Rights at Work: 25 Years Later.

The Charter and human rights are increasingly re-shaping labour laws and employment relations in the Canadian workplace

Human rights and equality have become the leading legal issues in the Canadian workplace. Anti-discrimination clauses in collective agreements, human rights statutes and even the Charter of Rights and Freedoms are regularly litigated in labour and employment law cases. As our society becomes more diverse and more rights-oriented, and as our employment relationships become more transitional, workplace glass ceilings have become more visible and human rights talk has become more evident.

The workplace, in Canada and elsewhere, is not only a primary source of human rights violations but it is also one of the most obvious social institutions through which to challenge these discriminatory practices through laws and campaigns. Many of the path-breaking human rights and equality rulings in Canada over the past twenty-five years – on disability, race, gender, religious beliefs, sexual orientation, older workers, and family status issues – have arisen out of the workplace. All of these human rights issues, and more, have been at the centre of developments in modern Canadian labour law and industrial relations.

The University of Western Ontario and the national law firm of Heenan Blaikie LLP are proud to co-sponsor their fifth labour law conference, with this year’s theme of The Charter and Human Rights at Work: 25 Years Later. This event brings together prominent international labour law academics, practising lawyers, chairs of Canadian labour relations boards, Canadian and international policy advisors, law students and representatives of employers, unions and government. Together, they will engage in a broad-based debate on the present and future direction of human rights and equality law in the workplace.

The conference was co-chaired by Brian Burkett, Partner, Heenan Blaikie LLP and Professor Michael Lynk, Faculty of Law, UWO.  The program was as follows:

PANEL 1: The Charter and Labour Law: What Difference Has it Made?
Chaired by: The Right Honourable Beverley McLachlin, P.C., Chief Justice of Canada
Panelists:
Paul Cavalluzzo, Cavalluzzo Hayes Shilton McIntyre & Cornish
Patricia Hughes, The Law Commission of Ontario
Brian Langille, University of Toronto

Canadian labour law, once thought of as the Charter’s orphan, has recently witnessed a number of trail-blazing decisions on workplace rights. In recent rulings – Dunmore, Pepsi-Cola, Advanced Cutting and Coring, and now B.C. Health Services – the Supreme Court of Canada has acknowledged a place for collective rights in the Charter, and opened the door to challenging restrictions on organizing, collective bargaining and industrial disputes. But how wide-open is the door, and how solid is the foundation?

The Right Honourable Beverley McLachlin, P.C., Chief Justice of Canada

The Right Honourable Beverley McLachlin, P.C., Chief Justice of Canada

PANEL 2: Fundamental Rights at Work in International Law
Chaired by: Warren Edmondson, Chair, Canada Industrial Relations Board
Panelists:
Adelle Blackett, McGill University
Michael Lynk, University of Western Ontario
Lee Swepston, International Labour Organization

With the Supreme Court of Canada’s recent ruling in B.C. Health Services giving a prominent role to international labour law, we will be looking to the legal rulings of the International Labour Organization and other global institutions for guidance in future workplace Charter challenges. What are the fundamental principles of international labour law, how might they shape litigation on the horizon, and what has Canada’s labour law record been at the ILO?

Luncheon Speaker: Mr. Hassan Yussuff, Secretary-Treasurer, Canadian Labour Congress

Hassan Yussuff has been the elected Secretary-Treasurer of the Canadian Labour Congress, the second ranking leadership position in the Canadian labour movement, since 2002. A native of Guyana, he first became active in the labour movement as a young worker at CanCar in Toronto, before becoming a staff representative with the Canadian Auto Workers. At the CLC, Mr. Yussuff’s responsibilities include include political action, human rights, anti-racism, and immigration and refugee issues. He is also a Vice-President of ORIT, the American hemispheric organization of the International Trade Union Confederation.

Mr. Hassan Yussuff, Secretary-Treasurer, Canadian Labour Congress

Mr. Hassan Yussuff, Secretary-Treasurer, Canadian Labour Congress

PANEL 3: Human Rights at Work I
Chaired by: Kevin Whitaker, Chair, Ontario Labour Relations Board
Panelists:
Gillian Demeyere, University of Western Ontario
Ravi Malhotra, University of Ottawa
Andrea Zwack, Heenan Blaikie

The rapid rise of human rights to legal prominence in the Canadian workplace has witnessed prominent rulings on all of the major statutory anti-discrimination grounds. This panel will critically examine legal developments in the human rights areas of religious beliefs, race and gender at work.

PANEL 4: Human Rights at Work II
Chaired by: Mr. Hassan Yussuff, Canadian Labour Congress
Panelists:
Michael Mac Neil, Carleton University
Dianne Pothier, Dalhousie University
Larry Steinberg, Koskie Minsky

This panel continued a critical assessment of human rights developments in workplace law, including legal developments around employment discrimination over family and marital status, disability and age.

The Honourable Donald Johnston, P.C., Q.C. was the banquet speaker. A lawyer, former federal cabinet minister and international public servant, he was elected four times to the House of Commons.  He held several cabinet roles under Prime Minister Trudeau, including Minister of Justice and Attorney-General and President of the Treasury Board. In 1996, he became Secretary-General of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), the first non-European to occupy this prestigious position. During his 10 year tenure, Mr. Johnston took the lead in establishing corporate social responsibility, sustainable development and employment conditions as integral parts of international economic policy.

Honourable Donald Johnston, P.C., Q.C.

Honourable Donald Johnston, P.C., Q.C.




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