â–ş Listen Live
â–ş Listen Live

Standard paid sick leave begins in January

Begining on Jan. 1, workers in B.C. will get a minimum of five paid sick leave days per year.

Provincial officials said B.C. is now the first province in Canada to legislate this level of paid time off.

This applies to all workers covered by the Employment Standards Act, including part-time staff.

“Beginning in the new year, workers will no longer lose pay for making the responsible choice of taking a sick day,” said Premier John Horgan.

“The pandemic has highlighted that when workers don’t have paid sick leave, it’s bad for them, it’s bad for their co-workers and it’s bad for their employers.”

The province surveyed more than 60,000 workers and employers to gather feedback on the number of days that should be offered.

B.C. government officials said feedback from workplaces that already offer paid sick leave found most workers take zero to five days of sick leave per year.

“Many of the people who lack paid sick leave are the same workers we depended on most during the pandemic,” said Harry Bains, Minister of Labour.

“Lower-wage workers who help us get our groceries, prepare our food at restaurants and make sure we have the services we need deserve a basic protection like paid sick leave.”

According to the provincial officials, they looked at countries that also implemented paid sick leave, such as Australia, New Zealand and several European countries.

They found the cost increases for most businesses were less than expected.

Josiah Spyker
Josiah Spyker
Josiah is an integral part of our East Kootenay team. Since joining Vista Radio in 2021, he has combined his love of community and sport in his reporting for the news team, while also stepping in as an on-air announcer.

Continue Reading

chnv Now playing play

ckkc Now playing play

- Advertisement -

Related Articles

- Advertisement -

Latest News

SD8 earns national communications award for sustainability campaign

Kootenay Lake’s School District 8 has been named a 2025 Canadian Association of Communicators in Education Award of Distinction winner for its 2024-25 Sustainability in SD8 public engagement campaign.

E-bike safety still a concern in Nelson

Speeding and rule-breaking e-bike users continue to be a growing concern in Nelson. 

Nelson Police Chief warns gun buyback could strain small forces

Nelson Police Chief Donovan Fisher says the federal government’s assault-style rifle buyback program could strain smaller police forces without extra supports. 

B.C. Conservatives propose higher tax caps to offset municipal losses from pipeline assessment

Proposed legislation from the B.C. Conservatives would raise taxation rate caps for municipalities, which are bracing for a potentially major financial hit from upcoming assessment changes. The post B.C. Conservatives propose higher tax caps to offset municipal losses from pipeline assessment appeared first on AM 1150.

Eby leaves door open to early election over North Coast transmission line bill

Premier David Eby isn’t ruling out an early election if his government’s bill to fast-track construction of the North Coast transmission line fails to pass. The post Eby leaves door open to early election over North Coast transmission line bill appeared first on AM 1150.
- Advertisement -