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21 Canadian Lab. & Emp. L.J. 267 (2018)
A Tattered Quilt: Exemptions and Special Rules under Ontario's Employment Standards Act

handle is hein.journals/canlemj21 and id is 275 raw text is: 










         A  Tattered Quilt: Exemptions and

            Special Rules under Ontario's

               Employment Standards Act



            Leah  F. Vosko,  John Grundy,  Rebecca   Casey,
                Andrea  M.  Noack  &  Mark  P. Thomas*

      The development of employment standards legislation in Ontario has his-
torically been shaped by a tension between the competing goals of establishing
a minimum  floor of protections for employees and minimizing interference with
employers' business practices. This tension has resulted in the establishment
of numerous exemptions from the legislated minimum standards based on the
perceived needs of particular industries, sectors or occupational groups. The
growth of the patchwork of exemptions has been accompanied in recent dec-
ades by the spread of precarious employment, with particular effects on women,
recent immigrants, and young people. By examining specific occupations subject
to an exemption from or special rule regarding the minimum wage, this article
reveals the disproportionate costs of exemptions for certain groups of employ-
ees. Through an in-depth look at the cases of homecare employees, liquor serv-
ers, and agricultural employees, it demonstrates how exemptions and special
rules can exacerbate insecurity for those in occupations characterized by high
degrees of precariousness, and often otherwise subject to disadvantage in the
labour force.






*   Leah F. Vosko is Professor of Political Science and Canada Research Chair in the
    Political Economy of Gender & Work at York University. John Grundy, PhD.,
    is a co-investigator in Closing the Enforcement Gap: Improving Employment
    Standards Protections for People in Precarious Jobs. Rebecca Casey is an
    Assistant Professor in the Department of Sociology at Acadia University. Andrea
    Noack is an Associate Professor in the Department of Sociology at Ryerson
    University. Mark P. Thomas is Associate Professor in the Department of
    Sociology at York University. Some of the analysis presented in this paper was
    conducted at the Toronto RDC, which is part of the Canadian Research Data
    Centre Network (CRDCN). The services and activities provided by the Toronto
    RDC  are made possible by the financial or in-kind support of the SSHRC, the
    CIHR, the CFI, Statistics Canada, and the University of Toronto. The views
    expressed in this paper do not necessarily represent those of the CRDCN or of
    its partners.

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