Ontario passes legislation protecting the rights of restaurant and hotel employees

Ontario passes legislation protecting the rights of restaurant and hotel employees

It will affect hundreds of thousands of people.

The Ontario government has introduced a bill that, if passed, would provide revolutionary protections for more than 400,000 people employed in the restaurant and hospitality industry.

These are amendments to the province’s Employment Standards Act that involve two major changes:

  • A complete ban on unpaid trial shifts (any work must be paid);
  • Prohibition of deducting from employees' salaries damages related to theft by visitors (e.g., running away without paying the bill).
"It is unacceptable that any worker in our province should have their wages deducted or see themselves put in harm’s way because of someone else’s criminal activity," commented Labor Minister David Piccini on the bill.

Studies have shown that about one in 20 diners leave a restaurant without paying, and gasoline thefts at gas stations cost Ontario businesses more than CA$ 3 million in 2022.

Ontario laws already require employees to be paid for all hours worked, but many employers get around them through "trial" shifts and penalty systems.

Something about a tip

In addition, if a general tip bank is used (not for specific employees, but on a "stack and share" basis), employers are now required to notify visitors. Signs to this effect must be posted in public.

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