• First Reference
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Blog Signup 📨

First Reference Talks

Discussions on Human Resources, Employment Law, Payroll and Internal Controls

  • Home
  • About
  • Archives
  • Resources
  • Buy Policies

Archives for August 2012

By Earl Altman | 4 Minutes Read August 29, 2012

When is an employee not an employee?

Employees, and employers, frequently seek to paint the employment relationship in a different manner in order to serve whatever goals they may have in either their employment or in the operation of their business. The writer has seen countless “Consulting Agreements” which merely attempt to clothe an employee with some characteristics of an independent contractor in the hope of either reducing taxes or avoiding Employment Standards Act responsibilities.

Article by Earl Altman / Employee Relations, Employment Standards / Assignment Agreement, Confidentiality Agreement, Consulting Agreements, definition of employee, employment contract, employment law, employment relationship, employment standards act, Employment status, Form Selection Clause, independent contractor, termination

By Simon Heath, BA, MIR, LLB, Heath Law | 2 Minutes Read August 28, 2012

Human Rights Tribunal scrutinizes medical note in allegation of discrimination on the basis of disability

Human Resources practitioners are constantly confronted with medical notes from employees that do not provide any meaningful medical information (i.e. Bob is off work for 2 weeks because he is under doctor’s care). In addition, some employees who are disciplined or terminated after submitting these less than informative medical notes will file human rights complaints alleging discrimination in employment on the basis of a disability. Recently, the Ontario Human Rights Tribunal (“Tribunal”) had a chance to comment on these all too common issues...

Article by Simon Heath, BA, MIR, LLB, Heath Law / Employee Relations, Human Rights / budgetary reasons, Disability, Disclosing medical information, discrimination, discrimination on the basis of disability, duty to accommodate, employee discipline, employment law, human rights code, Human rights complaint, human rights tribunal, medical notes, poor performance, Shearer v. The Royal Canadian Legion, stress, termination

By Amery Boyer | 3 Minutes Read August 27, 2012

Critical accountabilities and performance management

Job descriptions have many uses, the most obvious being to describe key responsibilities and serve as a basis for salary or pay. However, a job description has the potential to deliver far more than this...

Article by Amery Boyer / Employee Relations, Payroll / critical accountabilities, employment contract, HR issues, Human Resource Management, implementation tools, job description, Job descriptions, key success factors, knowledge, performance management, policy, productivity, skills and abilities, solid business plan, standards of performance

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Go to page 1
  • Go to page 2
  • Go to page 3
  • Go to page 4
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Go to page 12
  • Go to Next Page »

Footer

About us

Established in 1995, First Reference is the leading publisher of up to date, practical and authoritative HR compliance and policy databases that are essential to ensure organizations meet their due diligence and duty of care requirements.

First Reference Talks

  • Home
  • About
  • Archives
  • Resources
  • Buy Policies

Main Menu

  • About First Reference
  • Resources
  • Contact us
  • 1 800 750 8175

Stay Connected

  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

We welcome your comments on our blog articles. However, we do not respond to specific legal questions in this space.
We do not provide any form of legal advice or legal opinion. Please consult a lawyer in your jurisdiction or try one of our products.


Copyright © 2009 - 2023 · First Reference Inc. · All Rights Reserved
Legal and Copyright Notices · Publisher's Disclaimer · Privacy Policy · Accessibility Policy