Marie-Yosie Saint-Cyr, LL.B. Managing Editor
Family Day, Monday, February 15, 2021, is celebrated in Alberta, British Columbia, Manitoba, Nova Scotia, Ontario, Prince Edward Island, Saskatchewan and New Brunswick. Family Day (it may have a different name depending on the jurisdiction) is recognized as a public (statutory) holiday in these provinces and employees get the day off with pay, if eligible.
Even with most employees working from home due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the public (statutory) holiday must still be observed as provided in employment/labour standards legislation.
Although the above-noted jurisdictions celebrate Family Day on the same day (the third Monday in February), an employee’s entitlement is governed by the laws of the jurisdiction in which the employee works. Employment/labour standards legislation and regulations establish minimum standards of employment for most employers and employees working in a specific jurisdiction. However, employers and employees (or their agents, such as unions) may agree to more favourable (and different) terms in their employment agreement or collective bargaining agreement.
For example, to be eligible for a public holiday, employees typically need to meet certain requirements, such as working a minimum number of hours or days in a given period before the holiday. The rules regulating the treatment of public holidays are different in each jurisdiction.
Below is a brief overview of the legal requirements and issues surrounding Family Day in Alberta, British Columbia, Manitoba (known as Louis Riel Day), Nova Scotia (known as Heritage Day), Ontario, Prince Edward Island (known as Islander Day), Saskatchewan and New Brunswick.
Note: This blog post is just a reminder. There are exemptions, special rules, greater benefits and additional requirements found in the law and accompanying regulations. Such information can be found in our payroll publication PaySource or HR publication The Human Resources Advisor.
In Alberta, an employee is entitled to a general holiday if they have worked for the same employer for at least 30 workdays in the 12 months prior to the holiday.
Most employees are entitled to general holidays and receive general holiday pay if one of the following applies to them:
To be eligible for general holiday pay for Family Day, employees must:
Employees who do not work on a general holiday must be paid at least their average daily wage. To calculate the average daily wage, employers can choose to divide the total wages earned by the number of days worked in either:
If an employee works on Family Day, the employee is entitled to general holiday pay of an amount that is equal to:
To qualify for this statutory holiday, an employee must have been employed for 30 calendar days before the statutory holiday and must have worked or earned wages on 15 of the 30 days immediately before the statutory holiday. Note: Employees who work under an averaging agreement or variance at any time in the 30 days before the holiday do not have to meet the 15-day requirement.
An employee who is entitled to a statutory holiday must be paid at least an “average day’s pay.” An eligible employee is entitled to be paid an average day’s pay when the employee is given a day off on a statutory holiday, or the statutory holiday falls on a regular day off. When an eligible employee works on a statutory holiday, the employee is entitled to be paid time-and-a-half for the first 12 hours worked and double-time for any work over 12 hours, plus an average day’s pay.
To calculate an average day’s pay: Divide “total wages” earned in the 30 calendar days before the statutory holiday by the number of days worked. Note: Vacation days taken during this period count as days worked.
“Total wages” include wages, commissions, statutory holiday pay and vacation pay but not overtime pay.
Where an employee is not eligible for statutory holiday pay, the employee is not entitled to be paid an average day’s pay. If an ineligible employee works on a statutory holiday, the employee may be paid as if it were a regular workday.
In Manitoba, employees do not have to work a certain length of time before they qualify for general holiday time and pay. All employees receive a general holiday and pay unless:
General holiday pay can be calculated in two ways:
Employees who work on a general holiday are usually entitled to 1.5 times their regular rate of pay for the hours worked on that day, in addition to their general holiday pay.
When a general holiday falls on a weekday that the employee does not usually work, the employer is required to give the employee a normal workday off with general holiday pay. This must be given prior to the employee’s next vacation or at another time agreed to by the employee.
In Nova Scotia, to have a day off with pay, employees must:
If an employee qualifies for the holiday and is given the day off, the employer must pay a regular day’s pay for that holiday. If the employee’s hours of work change from day to day, or if wages change from pay to pay, the employer should average hours or wages over 30 days to calculate what to pay the employee for the holiday.
Note: If the holiday falls on an employee’s regular day off, the employee is entitled to another day off with pay.
An employee who works on the holiday and who qualifies to be paid holiday pay is entitled to receive both of the following:
Family Day is also a designated retail closing day in Nova Scotia under the Retail Business Designated Day Closing Act and the Retail Business Uniform Closing Day Act.
In Ontario, most employees who qualify for Family Day are entitled to take the day off work and be paid public holiday pay. Generally speaking, most employees will get a public holiday off with pay; however, employees may not automatically be entitled to Family Day. There are certain categories of employees who may not have the right to the day off. Therefore, it would be important to communicate entitlement to employees through a policy.
It does not matter how recently employees were hired or how many days they worked before the public holiday (although that can affect the amount of their public holiday pay). An employee would not be entitled to Family Day if:
The amount of public holiday pay that an employee is entitled to is all of the regular wages earned by the employee in the four workweeks before the workweek with the public holiday plus all of the vacation pay payable to the employee with respect to the four workweeks before the workweek with the public holiday, divided by 20.
If an employee agrees electronically or in writing to work on the public holiday, there are two options:
Family Day was also made a public holiday under Ontario’s Retail Business Holidays Act (RBHA). Most retail outlets must close on a day that is a holiday under that RBHA (with exceptions, i.e., the City of Toronto).
In Prince Edward Island, in order to qualify for the day off with pay, employees must:
An employee who qualifies for the paid holiday, but is not scheduled to work on that day, is entitled to the day off with the employee’s regular day of pay.
An employee who qualifies for the paid holiday, but is not scheduled to work on that day because the paid holiday falls on a day that is not the employee’s normal workday, is entitled to another day off with the employee’s regular day of pay.
An employee who qualifies for the paid holiday and who also works on that day must be paid either:
Note: An employee who has an arrangement with his or her employer where the employee may elect to either work or not work when requested, does not qualify.
In Saskatchewan, an employee who normally works Mondays and is given Family Day off is entitled to public holiday pay. It does not matter how recently employees were hired or how many days they worked before they are entitled to public holidays. All employees qualify for public holidays unless they work in jobs exempt from the public holiday provision of the Saskatchewan Employment Act, or work in businesses with special rules.
Most employees’ public holiday pay will be equal to 5% of their wages, not including overtime, bonuses and gratuities, earned in the four weeks before the public holiday. Employees earn this pay whether or not they work on the public holiday. It is paid out in the pay period in which the holiday occurs.
If employees work on a holiday, including managers, except those engaged in the operation of a well-drilling rig, they are entitled to both public holiday pay and premium pay of 1.5 times their hourly wage for each hour or part of an hour worked. This premium is paid on top of the employee’s public holiday pay for that day.
Employers can apply for a permit from the Director of Labour Standards allowing the public holiday to be observed on another day. If a majority of the employees agree, the director may order that the holiday be observed on another day. If the employees are represented by a trade union, the trade union and the employer may agree, in writing, to observe the public holiday on another day.
To qualify, an employee must:
An employee who qualifies and does not work on the public holiday must receive his or her regular day’s pay for that day.
An employee who qualifies and works on the public holiday must receive his or her regular day’s pay plus one and one-half times his or her regular wage rate for the hours worked on that day.
All employees are entitled to receive one and one-half times their regular wage rate for each hour worked on a paid public holiday.
Provincial employment standards legislation does not apply to employees of federally regulated businesses (i.e., banks, telecommunications companies, railways and airlines) or to federal civil servants. These employers are covered by the Canada Labour Code, which does not provide for Family Day. However, federally regulated employers can, at their discretion, add Family Day as a public holiday or floater day in workplace policies. This might in change 2021, as the federal government intends to propose amendments to the Canada Labour Code to introduce Family Day as a public holiday.
Employment/labour standards legislation in Newfoundland and Labrador, Quebec, Northwest Territories, Nunavut and Yukon does not provide for Family Day as a public (statutory) holiday. Employees in those provinces and territories do not get a day off with pay. However, employers can, at their discretion, add Family Day as a public holiday or floater day in workplace policies.
It is a relatively easy and cost-efficient way for workplaces to become more family-friendly. It will provide employees with the opportunity to spend more time with their families and an additional day to look after household responsibilities in one of the coldest months in the winter season.
Employees can be dismissed for cause, and therefore without notice or severance, when their misconduct or performance is so egregious that the employment relationship has been irreparably harmed. In assessing this issue, employers must adopt a contextual approach, which considers not only the misconduct in question, but the entirety of the employment relationship.
Rudner Law, Employment / HR Law & Mediation
I’ve discussed the Privacy by Design principle before, in the Inside Internal Control newsletter. In case you don’t know, PbD is an approach developed by Dr. Ann Cavoukian, the Privacy Commissioner of Ontario, which proactively embeds privacy protection by default in the design of an organization’s practices and products.
Colin Braithwaite
This year’s Ontario Employment Law Conference co-sponsored by First Reference and Stringer Brisbin Humphrey on June 2, 2010, will touch on several topics of importance to employers. The first topic on the Agenda will provide employers with guidance on a significant court decision and changes in court procedures affecting the termination process. Specifically it should help employers minimize claims arising from the termination process.
Marie-Yosie Saint-Cyr, LL.B. Managing Editor