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Canada Human Rights Commission

By Devry Smith Frank LLP | 2 Minutes Read November 19, 2014

No procedural duty to accommodate

The Federal Court of Appeal recently ruled in Canada Human Rights Commission v Attorney General of Canada and Bronwyn Cruden, that employers do not have a separate procedural duty to accommodate employees and any procedural inadequacy throughout the accommodation process is not critical where the employer’s actions do not constitute discrimination.

Article by Devry Smith Frank LLP / Employee Relations, Human Rights, Payroll / accommodation process, Canada Human Rights Commission, discrimination, duty to accommodate, employment law, federal court of appeal, investigate a complaint, Meiorin, monetary penalty, Ontario Human Rights Code, Supreme Court of Canada, undue hardship

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