Assignment 2 - Termination of Employment
Assignment 2 - Termination of Employment
Assignment 2 - Termination of Employment
Whether you are an employee who has been fired from your job or an
employer who is thinking about terminating an employee’s contract, it is
important to know what you are going into to protect your right and avoid
violating any law.
In order to validly dismiss an employee, the employee must be accorded due
process by the employer. It requires that the employee be given notice of
termination and payment of corresponding severance pay.
The employer has a legal obligation to follow the employment laws when
terminating an employee. The employee may have a claim for wrongful
termination if the termination was illegal.
What does Ontario Law take on Termination?
There are two kinds of termination of employment in Ontario:
1. Termination with Cause
2. Termination without Cause
The Ontario's Employment Standards Act provides for guidelines in
terminating an employee. The act clearly sets out rights on termination of
employment and governs individual termination of employment.
The right of the employee includes the right to be terminated based on “Just
Cause”.
Just Cause Termination occurs when an employee's performance or conduct
becomes so intolerable that continued employment is no longer tenable.
The Ontario Employment Standards Act provides several standards of just
cause dismissal. Accordingly, the termination based on just cause requires
grave and serious employee misconduct which may include the following:
a) Wilful misconduct
b) Disobedience
c) Wilful neglect of duty that is not trivial and has not been
condoned by the employer
d) Sexual misconduct or harassment
e) Fraud
In order to qualify as just cause termination the following must be present:
a) There must be a prior warning given by employer to the employee on
the unacceptable conduct or performance
b) The employee's conduct must be so serious as to amount to gross
misconduct for which no other reasonable alternative exists.
The answer is a clear YES, you can be legally terminated without cause.
In Ontario, the employer is given the right to put an end to its employee’s
work for no reason at all.
While the law requires for just cause in terminating an employee, the Ontario
Employment Standards Act also allows the termination of an employee
without cause.
C. the employer lays the employee off for a period longer than the
period of a temporary lay-off.
Temporary Lay-Off
If an employee has been constructively dismissed; laid off for a period longer
than the period provided by law, or the employer simply wants to end the
employment of that employee, the employer is considered to have terminated
the employee's employment without cause and therefore required to provide
relief as provided by Employment Standards Act as follows:
2. The employee should also earn vacation pay on their termination pay.
3. The employee is also entitled to the benefits that the employee would
have been entitled to have the employee continued to be employed
within the period provided in the notice including the payment of
whatever mandatory contributions.