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January 30, 2008

FAMILY DAY A PUBLIC HOLIDAY UNDER EMPLOYMENT STANDARDS ACT, 2000

TORONTO--Many employees will get the day off with public holiday pay on Family Day on Monday, February 18, 2008. Family Day is one of nine public holidays under Ontario’s Employment Standards Act, 2000.

QUALIFYING FOR FAMILY DAY ENTITLEMENTS

Generally, employees qualify for Family Day entitlements unless they fail, without reasonable cause, to work:

Public holiday pay is an amount equal to an employee’s regular wages earned in the four work weeks prior to Family Day plus any vacation pay payable during that period, divided by 20.

Employees who qualify for Family Day entitlements can be full time, part-time, permanent or on a limited-term contract. They can also be students. It does not matter how recently they were hired or how many days they worked before Family Day.

ENTITLEMENTS IF YOU ARE SCHEDULED TO WORK ON FAMILY DAY

Qualified employees are entitled to take off Family Day with public holiday pay. They can also agree in writing to work on Family Day and:

ENTITLEMENTS IF FAMILY DAY IS A NON-WORKING DAY

If Family Day falls on a non-working or vacation day, qualified employees can either take a substitute work day off with public holiday pay or, if they agree in writing, they can receive public holiday pay for Family Day with no substitute day off.

ENTITLEMENTS FOR NON-QUALIFIED EMPLOYEES

Generally, employees who don’t qualify for public holiday entitlements must work on Family Day if asked by their employer. Most non-qualified employees are entitled to be paid one-and-a-half times their regular rate of pay for each hour worked on Family Day. There is no substitute day off.

If a non-qualified employee is not asked to work on Family Day, he or she gets the day off with no pay.

SPECIAL RULES / EXCEPTIONS

Retail employees

Most employees who work in retail businesses--businesses that sell goods or services to the public--have the right to refuse to work on Family Day even if they don’t qualify for public holiday entitlements.

Retail employees who have agreed to work on Family Day may still refuse the assignment if they give their employer 48 hours advance notice before the first hour of work on Family Day.

However, these rules for retail employees do not apply to those who work for businesses that primarily:

Under the Retail Business Holidays Act, most retail outlets must close on Family Day.

Hospital, continuous operations and hospitality employees

Employees in hospitals, continuous operations and the hospitality industry may be required to work on Family Day if it falls on a day they would normally work and if they are not on vacation. This applies to employees who work for hospitals, nursing homes, hotels, motels, tourist resorts, restaurants and taverns, as well as to employees who work for continuous operations (operations or parts of operations that do not shut down or close down more than once a week such as oil refineries and alarm monitoring companies).

Elect-to-work employees

Elect-to-work employees--those who decide without penalty whether or not to work when requested--are not covered by the public holidays provisions of the Employment Standards Act, 2000 except for the right to be paid one-and-a-half times their regular rate of pay for each hour worked on Family Day.

EMPLOYEES NOT ELIGIBLE FOR PAID PUBLIC HOLIDAYS

Some employees are not eligible for Family Day entitlements because public holiday provisions under the Employment Standards Act, 2000 do not apply to certain jobs. These employees include:

INFORMATION SOURCES

For more information, employees and employers may call the Ontario Ministry of Labour’s Employment Standards Information Centre at (416) 326-7160 or 1-800-531-5551, or visit the nearest ServiceOntario Centre.

Written information--including employment standards fact sheets on subjects such as public holidays--can be accessed via the Ontario Ministry of Labour’s website at www.labour.gov.on.ca

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For further information:

Public enquiries (Employees and Employers):

Pay rates and time off:
Ministry of Labour
416-326-7160 or
1-800-531-5551
Store openings:
Ministry of Government and Consumer Services
416-326-8800 or
1-800-889-9768

Media enquiries:

Pay rates and time off:
Bruce Skeaff
Ministry of Labour
416-326-7405
Store openings:
Ciaran Ganley
Ministry of Government and Consumer Services
416-325-8659

See also:

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Last modified: January 30, 2008