Termination
Canada
Grounds
Termination for cause without notice or pay in lieu is permissible, but the standard is high, often requiring gross or willful misconduct, willful neglect of duty, fraud, serious breach of applicable policies or material or repeated insubordination. Termination without cause is permissible in most jurisdictions, provided that proper notice of termination or pay in lieu and any severance entitlements are provided. If an employer reprises against an employee for exercising a statutory right under employment standards, human rights or occupational health and safety legislation, no amount of notice will make the termination lawful.
In Quebec and Nova Scotia, additional protections exist for certain employees who have acquired tenure (ie, achieved a certain length of service), and in those circumstances, termination may not be possible except for bona fide reasons, such as position elimination or lack of work.
Federally regulated employers may not terminate a non-managerial employee with at least 1 year of service without sufficient reason – generally just cause or a discontinuance of the job function. Employers are federally regulated if they operate in industries that fall within the federal government's constitutional jurisdiction and concern matters of national interest, notably:
- Banking
- Telecommunication
- Air transport
- International and interprovincial rail and road transport Marine shipping, ferry and port services
- Radio and television Broadcasting Fisheries
- Interprovincial canals, pipelines, tunnels and bridges Grain, feed and seed mills
- Uranium mining and processing
The vast majority of employees in Canada – approximately 90 percent – are provincially regulated.
Employees entitled to termination protection
Generally, employees in Canada cannot be terminated without just cause or without proper notice or pay in lieu and severance pay, if applicable, under statute and at common/civil law. The right to reinstatement, however, is generally limited to unionized employees, employees terminated contrary to human rights legislation, employees terminated for exercising a statutory right with respect to working conditions or legislated employment standards (such as the right to a pregnancy leave) or for certain employees who both have the requisite length of service and are working in federally regulated industries or are employed in the provinces of Quebec or Nova Scotia.
Prohibited terminations
Employees may not be terminated based on a prohibited ground, for filing a harassment complaint or as an act of reprisal for asserting a statutory right with respect to working conditions or legislated employment standards.
Third-party approval for termination/termination documents
Approval is not required. However, for group terminations, notice in a prescribed form must generally be provided to the applicable Ministry of Labour and may need to be posted in the workplace (in some cases, before the termination will be effective).
Mass layoff rules
There are rules to be followed in the event of a mass layoff. Most jurisdictions provide for increased statutory notice or pay in lieu and/or severance pay in the event of a group termination and may require the provision of notice to a government ministry. In most jurisdictions, the threshold is 50 or more employees within a specified period. However, in some cases, the threshold is much lower (eg, in Quebec, the threshold is more than 9 employees). There is generally not a consultation obligation; however, notice may need to be given to a governmental authority.
Notice
The statutorily required minimum length of notice of termination varies by jurisdiction and, for individual terminations, is based on an employee's length of service. For individual terminations, most jurisdictions limit notice of termination to 8 weeks. Significantly longer notice periods (up to 2 years or more in exceptional circumstances) may be awarded at common law unless there is a valid termination clause in an employment agreement which limits the common law entitlement. In Quebec, similar entitlements exist and generally cannot be limited by contract at the outset of the employment relationship.
Statutory right to pay in lieu of notice or garden leave
Pay in lieu of notice is permitted. Garden leave is becoming more common and, with appropriate care and planning, an employer may often achieve this objective for a reasonable period.
Severance
Eligible employees in Ontario and the federal jurisdiction are eligible for severance pay. In Ontario, eligible employees (ie, those with 5 or more years of service who work for an employer that has a payroll in Ontario that exceeds 2.5 million per annum or are terminated as part of a group of 50 employees in a 6-month period as a result of a permanent discontinuance of all or part of the employer’s business at an establishment) receive 1 week for each year of service, with partial years prorated to a maximum of 26 weeks. In the federal jurisdiction, eligible employees receive the greater of 2 days' wages per year of service or 5 days' wages.