Employers in B.C. must include wage details on all public job ads under proposed legislation - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 03:01 AM | Calgary | -14.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

Employers in B.C. must include wage details on all public job ads under proposed legislation

The British Columbia government tabled a bill on pay transparencyTuesday which advocates saylacks power to make a difference for women in the workplace.

Pay transparency bill intended as step toward equity, but advocates say it lacks real power

A woman with short dark hair in business casual attire sitting at a desk in front of a laptop.
B.C. Human Rights Commissioner Kasari Govender notes the gender pay gap in the province stood at 17 per cent in 2022, one of the highest in Canada. (Monkey Business Images/Shutterstock)

The British Columbia government tabled a bill on pay transparencyTuesday, butadvocates say the proposed legislation lacks power to make a difference for women in the workplace.

According to the province, the legislation is the first phase toward pay equity, andonce passed will require employers to include wage or salary ranges on all publicly advertised jobs, and forbid employers to ask job seekers about their pay history or punish employees who disclose their pay to co-workers or job applicants.

B.C. employers will also gradually be required to publicly post reports on their gender pay gap once the legislation passes.

But whilegreater transparency is welcome,itwill not make a significant difference on pay equity in the province, saysB.C.'s human rights commissioner.

The regulation coversthe B.C. Public Service Agency and Crown corporationswith more than 1,000 workers such as ICBC, B.C. Hydro, WorkSafeBC, B.C. Housingand the B.C. Lottery Corporation by Nov. 1 this year.

The rest of employers with more than 1,000 workers will be included by the same time next year,followed byemployers with more than 300 employeeson Nov. 1, 2025, and employers with a staff of 50 or more inNovember 2026.

By June 1 of each year, B.C.'sMinistry of Finance will publish an annual report ongender pay in the province.

Kelli Paddon,B.C.'s parliamentary secretary for gender equity, said the provinceis committed to introducingpay equity legislation.

"Today is about drawing a line in the sand," Paddon said Tuesday. "Pay discrimination will not be tolerated in British Columbia."

B.C. still 'decades behind other provinces'

In a statement, B.C. Human Rights Commissioner Kasari Govender notes that thegender pay gap in the province stood at17 per cent in 2022,one of the highest in Canada, with women and gender-diverse people in B.C. earning less than cisgender men for comparable work.

The gap is larger for people with disabilities, Indigenous people, and people of colour.

"Pay transparency legislation by itself can provide us with more information about the problem if it is robust enough but if it doesn't lay the foundation for complementary pay equity legislation, we will not have the policy tools necessary to correct it," said Govender.

She addsthe legislationlacks tools for enforcementsuch as fines or other penalties.She also cites theabsence of a centralized database toassesspay gaps or changes over time.

"I am concerned that this legislation will be seen as a solution to the gender pay gap, when in reality B.C. is still decades behind other provinces," she said.

B.C. is one of four provinces, along with Alberta, Saskatchewan and Newfoundland, that does nothave pay transparency or pay equity legislation.

Last week, dozens of B.C. organizations, advocates and academics wrotean open letterto Premier David Eby and key cabinet ministers, calling on them to bring in a pay equity act "that enshrines in law the responsibility of all employers to identify and close gaps in pay for work of equal value."

Humera Jabir, a staff lawyer with signatory West Coast LEAF, said legislated pay transparency leaves the burden on individual employees to advocate for equal pay.

"The difference is accountability," Jabirsaid on CBC's On the Island.

"Transparency would require employers to report on what the systemic differences are in their organizations with respect to pay. Pay equity legislation includes accountability mechanisms, having to actually shift things, not just report on them."

With files from Meera Bains, Courtney Dickson and The Canadian Press