In authors or contributors

The Employment Standards Enforcement Gap and the Overtime Pay Exemption in Ontario

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
The Employment Standards Enforcement Gap and the Overtime Pay Exemption in Ontario
Abstract
Employment Standards (es) legislation sets minimum terms and conditions of employment in areas such as wages, working time, vacations and leaves, and termination and severance. es legislation is designed to provide minimum workplace protections, particularly for those with little bargaining power in the labour market. In practice, however, es legislation includes ways in which legislated standards may be avoided, including through exemptions that exclude specified employee groups, fully or partially, from legislative coverage. With a focus on the Ontario Employment Standards Act, this article develops a case study of exemptions to the overtime pay provision of the act and regulations and examines in closer detail three specific areas in which exemptions apply. Through this study of the overtime pay exemption, the system of exemptions is presented as a contradictory approach to the regulation of es that, in effect, reduces es coverage, contributes to the avoidance of key legislated standards, and undermines the goal of providing protection for workers in precarious jobs.
Publication
Labour / Le Travail
Volume
84
Pages
25-51
Date
Fall 2019
Language
en
ISSN
1911-4842
Accessed
12/7/19, 6:10 AM
Library Catalog
Project MUSE
Citation
Thomas, M. P., Vosko, L. F., Tucker, E., Steedman, M., Noack, A. M., Grundy, J., Gellatly, M., & Leinveer, L. (2019). The Employment Standards Enforcement Gap and the Overtime Pay Exemption in Ontario. Labour / Le Travail, 84, 25–51. https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1353/llt.2019.0032