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Elg v. Stirling Doors

By Rudner Law, Employment / HR Law & Mediation | 3 Minutes Read August 4, 2011

Working notice: destined to fail?

I always advise clients to consider their options when they must dismiss an individual (assuming it is without cause). Rather than automatically offering a package, and paying the employee not to work, I encourage our clients to consider whether a period of working notice could be viable. By doing so, at least they would get some value for their money. However, I often think back to a comment made by Mr. Justice Donnelly of the Ontario Superior Court of Justice, who, in the course of considering a wrongful dismissal claim, opined that “[w]orking notice is an institution almost invariably predestined to fail.”

Article by Rudner Law, Employment / HR Law & Mediation / Employment Standards, Payroll / Elg v. Stirling Doors, employment law, notice period, Ontario Superior Court of Justice, pay in lieu of notice, terminate an employee without cause, termination, termination notice, wilful misconduct, working notice, working notice of termination, wrongful dismissal

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