Wednesday, April 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Province giving all workers up to 3 paid days of sick leave

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 May, 2021 10:37 AM
  • Province giving all workers up to 3 paid days of sick leave

British Columbia will give all workers up to three days of paid sick leave to support those affected by COVID-19.

Labour Minister Harry Bains introduced the legislation today, saying it would be effective until Dec. 31.

He says the provincial government will be "stepping up in a major way" to support businesses with the cost.

Employers will be required to pay workers their full wages and those without an existing sick-leave program will be reimbursed by the government $200 per day for each worker.

WorkSafeBC, the provincial injury prevention and safety agency, will begin administering the program next month and employers will be required to cover the difference for those employees who earn more than $200 per day.

Bains also says a new permanent entitlement to paid personal injury and illness leave would take effect in January, although the number of entitlement days would be determined through consultation in the coming months.

"Having paid sick leave is good for businesses, good for workers, good for our communities and will help our economy recover faster," Bains said in the legislature on Tuesday.

The government says about half of B.C. employees do not currently have access to paid sick leave.

British Columbia's proposed legislation closely matches the program introduced in Ontario, which has come under heavy criticism for falling short of what's needed to curb the spread of COVID-19.

Premier John Horgan said last month the province was considering its own sick-leave program after the federal government failed to bring in a national plan that would fill in the gaps of the Canada Recovery Sickness Benefit.

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. police offer reassurance amid gang shootings

B.C. police offer reassurance amid gang shootings
There have been 10 shootings in Metro Vancouver in recent weeks, many of them during daylight hours, and two in mall parking lots filled with vehicles and pedestrians.

B.C. police offer reassurance amid gang shootings

Ontario likely to mix first and second vax doses

Ontario likely to mix first and second vax doses
Health Minister Christine Elliott says it's likely that recipients of the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine may receive a different shot for their second dose.

Ontario likely to mix first and second vax doses

Feds up risk on social finance to lure investors

Feds up risk on social finance to lure investors
Hussen says the changes respond to the concerns he heard from social-purpose organizations over the last year as revenues have dropped and demand for their services rose.

Feds up risk on social finance to lure investors

Privacy watchdog investigating Pornhub

Privacy watchdog investigating Pornhub
More than 100 victims of exploitive content and scores of lawmakers have also called for a full criminal investigation into MindGeek, alleging it regularly shared child pornography and sexual-assault videos as well as content shot or posted without the consent of subjects.

Privacy watchdog investigating Pornhub

Link between anti-maskers and far right: NDP

Link between anti-maskers and far right: NDP
"To brazenly not follow public-health guidelines puts people at risk and that is something that we've seen with extreme right-wing ideology, " he told reporters Monday.

Link between anti-maskers and far right: NDP

Canada to get two million vaccine doses this week

Canada to get two million vaccine doses this week
The two million shots represent the only expected shipments in what should be a comparatively quiet week of vaccine arrivals after Moderna delivered one million doses ahead of schedule last week.

Canada to get two million vaccine doses this week