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job interview

By Simon Heath, BA, MIR, LLB, Heath Law | 3 Minutes Read September 17, 2014

Company ordered to pay $8,000.00 for discriminatory text messages during job application process

A company in Ottawa has just landed itself with a damage award from the Ontario Human Rights Tribunal and a lot of embarrassing media coverage in how one of its employees discriminated against a potential candidate for employment on the basis of “race, colour and ethnic origin” during a telephone job interview and subsequent texts. The case of Bouraoui v. Ottawa Valley Cleaning and Restoration, is a shocking example of discriminatory conduct on the part of an employer.

Article by Simon Heath, BA, MIR, LLB, Heath Law / Employee Relations, Employment Standards, Human Rights / Bouraoui v. Ottawa Valley Cleaning and Restoration, comments were racist, decision about a job by text message, discrimination, discriminatory conduct on the part of an employer, discriminatory text messages, employment law, human rights code, job application process, job interview, Ontario Human Rights Tribunal, potential employers, potential job, resumes

By Alison J. Bird | 2 Minutes Read September 13, 2013

Employer liable under human rights for consultant’s discriminatory action

While many employers in Canada understand that they have obligations under human rights legislation, they likely do not appreciate that they can also be liable if a consultant contracted to provide services on their behalf engages in discriminatory action. This is what occurred in Ontario in the recent case of Reiss v CCH Canadian Limited, 2013 HRTO 764.

Article by Alison J. Bird / Employee Relations, Human Rights, Payroll / age discrimination, agent of the employer, canadian employment law, CCH Canadian Limited, communication, discrimination, discrimination on the basis of age, discriminatory action, Employer liability, employer liable, employment law, HR consultants, human resources consultant, human rights obligations, injury to dignity, injury to his dignity feelings and self-respect, interview, Job application, job candidate, job interview, junior candidates with lower salary expectations, legal writer, ontario, Ontario Human Rights Tribunal, potential liability, Reiss v CCH Canadian Limited, salary expectations, suggestive of a stereotyped assumption that an older person would necessarily want a higher salary, Testing

By Earl Altman | 5 Minutes Read April 23, 2013

The impact of human rights legislation on the interview process

Many H.R. Departments pride themselves on the skill with which they can interview prospective employees in order to assess their qualifications for the position being advertised, the fit of the employee with the organization, and the likelihood that the employee will stay with the organization for a reasonable period of time. What employers are often not cognizant of is the limitation imposed on this process by the provisions of various provincial and federal Human Rights statutes.

Article by Earl Altman / Accessibility Standards, Employee Relations, Human Rights / age, ancestry, ased on race, Canadian Human Rights Act, Citizenship, colour, creed, discrimination, discrimination in employment, discrimination with respect to employment, employment law, employment relationship, ethnic origin, family status, federally regulated employers, gender expression, gender identity, H.R. Departments, hiring process, human rights code, human rights legislation, human rights tribunals, interview process, interview prospective employees, interviewer, job interview, marital status, or disability, place of origin, position being advertised, record of offences, searching for and hiring employees, sex, sexual orientation

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