Written by: Sahil Kanaya
There are only four allowable circumstances in which an employer and employee may enter into an agreement to vary from the Ontario Employment Standards Act (ESA) standards. All agreements should:
An employee’s consent must also be informed and voluntary. For greater clarity, an informed party understands the consequences of consent (i.e. party is aware of important or exceptional terms) and a party that has voluntarily consented has done so freely and without any form of coercion from the employer.
To vary maximum daily hours, you need only meet the first two standards below. To vary maximum weekly hours, you must meet all three standards below:
Non-union employees may revoke the agreement with two weeks’ notice. Employers must provide “reasonable” notice which may vary depending on several factors. For example, if an agreement has been in effect for several years, reasonable notice will likely exceed two weeks.
Where an employee’s hours of work vary greatly week to week, the parties may agree to average the hours worked over an agreed upon period of weeks by meeting the standards below:
If the conditions are met, overtime is payable upon exceeding an average of 44 hours (or whatever the overtime threshold is for the industry/job). Such agreements may be valued by employees who desire flexible hours and employers seeking to lower the cost of overtime pay.
An employer and employee may agree that the employee must take 1.5 hours of paid time off (at their regular wage rate) for each hour of overtime worked in lieu of overtime pay. While this does not reduce the overall amount you must pay the employee, it may be useful where the demand for labour varies greatly week to week. Directorial approval is not necessary.
An employer and employee may agree to allow for vacations to be taken in increments of less than one week at a time. Directorial approval is not necessary.
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