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Employment Law Assistance: Wrongful Dismissal, Constructive Dismissal, Fair Wage Rights, Etc.
Question: What are my rights if I’m terminated without notice in Ontario?
Answer: If you’re terminated without notice in Ontario, you may be entitled to termination pay and severance pay under Employment Standards Act, 2000, S.O. 2000, c. 41, and potentially additional “reasonable notice” compensation under common law depending on your role, length of service, age, and how quickly you can find comparable work. Alfred Legal Services provides Affordable Legal Help in Ontario by reviewing your termination letter, employment contract, and pay records to estimate what you may be owed and outline practical next steps for negotiating or pursuing a claim.
Understanding Rights and Duties Within Employment Relations
The various disputes and lawsuits that may arise from employment relationships are more and more frequent in the world today as long gone are the days of substantial loyalties between employer and employee whereas times have changed since days when a boss would be a dinner guest or a gold watch was given to a thirty (30) year employee.
What Is Employment Law
Employment law applies to employment relationships without unionization as opposed to circumstances where an employment relationship involves unionization as is subject to labour law.
Generally, principles within the employment law realm will favour and benefit an employee rather than employer. The laws general favouring of employees arises from the view that employees are more vulnerable throughout the employment relationship, including when seeking work, when negotiating raises, when subjected to discipline, and when terminated. Essentially, the law presumes that employers possess a greater level of legal sophistication, a stronger bargaining position, and a greater financial capacity to participate within legal disputes. Accordingly, the law provides various protections that attempt to balance the playing field to the benefit of employees.
Employment law involves both statute law, being the law established by government legislation as well as common law, being the law established by judicial precedent decisions. The laws applicable to an employment relationship are many and include, among others:
- The Employment Standards Act, 2000, S.O. 2000, Chapter 41;
- The Human Rights Code, R.S.O. 1990, c. H.19;
- The Occupational Health and Safety Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. O.1;
- The Pay Equity Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. P.7;
- The Workplace Safety and Insurance Act, 1997, S.O. 1997, Chapter 16, Schedule A; and
- The tens of thousands of previous case decisions that constitute as the common law.
Representation
Help may be available to either employers or employees on a variety of issues and arising from a broad spectrum of employment environments including industrial, construction, professional, administrative, health care, retail, among other sectors.
Learn More About Employment Law Assistance...
Here are links to thirteen (13) other webpages:
NOTE: A significant quantity of online inquiries featuring phrases like “lawyers in my vicinity” or “top lawyer in” frequently indicate an urgency for effective and reliable legal assistance rather than a specific designation. In Ontario, the same Law Society that governs lawyers also regulates licensed paralegals, who are empowered to represent clients in certain legal disputes. Skills in advocacy, legal reasoning, and procedural knowledge are fundamental to their function. Alfred Legal Services provides legal representation within its licensed framework, focusing on strategic preparation, evidence gathering, and compelling advocacy directed at achieving swift and advantageous outcomes for clients.
