Tuesday, April 7, 2026
ADVT 
National

Federal pay-equity commissioner reappointed

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Sep, 2020 10:52 PM
  • Federal pay-equity commissioner reappointed

Canada's first national pay-equity commissioner is having her term extended amid delays getting new pay-equity legislation into action.

Karen Jensen was appointed a year ago to the Canadian Human Rights Commission with a mandate to help establish a new pay-equity division in preparation for the new law to take effect in 2020. She was to officially become the pay-equity commissioner as soon as the law was in force.

But Labour Minister Filomena Tassi said Friday it is taking a bit longer to get the regulations in place for the Pay Equity Act and that it won't happen now until 2021.

"COVID-19 as you know has presented some challenges," said Tassi.

Consultations for the proposed pay-equity rules ended in June 2019, but when COVID-19 hit in March, Tassi's department became mostly consumed with the health and safety of workers during the pandemic.

"Having said that, this remains a priority and we're looking forward to full implementation of the act by next year," she said. "It will be in force by next year."

Cabinet last week issued an order to extend Jensen's appointment to reflect the delay.

A right to equal pay for equal work was enshrined in the Canadian Human Rights Act in 1977, but a national law to require federally regulated employers to actively pursue pay equity did not get passed until December 2018.

Jensen is to help employers implement the needed changes, ensure workers know their rights and help resolve disputes.

On average in Canada, women earn 12 per cent less than men, the third largest gender pay gap among G7 countries and the seventh largest in the OECD. On an hourly basis, that is a difference of $3.87.

Statistics Canada shows in some fields the pay disparity is greater than the norm, such as in education and social service jobs, where on average females earn 81 cents for every $1 earned by men. In manufacturing and utility jobs, the average pay for women is 75 cents for every $1 earned by men.

The gap is smallest in health-care fields and natural and applied sciences.

MORE National ARTICLES

University of Victoria hires new president

University of Victoria hires new president
A year-long search for a new president has taken the University of Victoria to Australia to hire a Canadian man.

University of Victoria hires new president

RCMP charge man after drugs, weapons, cash seized

RCMP charge man after drugs, weapons, cash seized
A five-month investigation in B.C. has resulted in charges against a man in what Ridge Meadows RCMP say is the largest seizure of drugs, weapons and cash in the detachment's history.

RCMP charge man after drugs, weapons, cash seized

Food surplus program finally rolls out

Food surplus program finally rolls out
More than 12 million eggs will be redistributed via an emergency federal program designed to help farmers faced with too much food and nowhere to sell it due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Food surplus program finally rolls out

Top court won't review disclosure ruling

Top court won't review disclosure ruling
The Supreme Court of Canada will not review a judge's decision to grant author Steven Galloway access to emails between a woman who accused him of sexual assault and staff at the University of British Columbia.

Top court won't review disclosure ruling

Wage subsidy could cost less than expected

Wage subsidy could cost less than expected
Canada's official fiscal watchdog says the federal wage subsidy program might cost $14 billion less than the government predicted.

Wage subsidy could cost less than expected

WE Charity scales back operations

WE Charity scales back operations
WE Charity is scaling back its operations, making dozens of layoffs in Canada and the United Kingdom, while also looking to sell some of its real estate holdings in Toronto.

WE Charity scales back operations