City directs contractors to reinstate Sikh security guards who lost work due to clean-shaven rule - Action News
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City directs contractors to reinstate Sikh security guards who lost work due to clean-shaven rule

The City of Toronto is directingits contractors to reinstate any security guards who lost their jobs because they were required to shave their beards in order to wear N95 masks at work.

Guards are required to wear N95 masks in shelter settings during COVID-19 outbreaks

Birkawal Singh Anand, a 21-year-old originally from India who works with ASP Security as a security guard, says he thought he'd be free to practise his religion in Canada. Instead, he says he was forced to choose between shaving his beard or continuing his job. (Submitted by the World Sikh Organization)

The City of Toronto is directingits contractors to reinstate any security guards who lost their jobs because they were required to shave their beards in order to wear N95 masks at work.

The directivecomes after a complaint by theWorld Sikh Organization (WSO) that security guard contractors for the city werenot accommodating employees who havefacial hair for religious reasons, and thus failed the fit testsrequired for wearing N95 masks.

Security guards are required to wear N95masks when they are workingat city homeless shelters fightingCOVID-19 outbreaks, according to a public health requirement.

"The City has directed these contractors to accommodate their employees who have requested religious exemptions and to reinstate any employee whose employment was terminated, immediately," the city said in a news release on Monday.

"As part of its investigation, the city will be looking at its legal options, up to and including terminating the contracts of any contractors found to be in violation of city policy or human rights legislation."

The city said it has contracts with many large security guard organizations and employees who have facial hair for religious reasons can be accommodated in other city settings, including shelters that are not in outbreak. However, one security contractor has stated it had no comparable positions within the city to place the employees who were affected.

Change 'discriminatory' rule, WSO tells city

According to the city, it is workingwith security companies contracted to its shelter system to ensure these accommodations are provided and that no contract employee will beunable to work due to public health requirements.

The City of Toronto says N95 masks are recommended by many health experts to best protect against the spread of the highly contagious Omicron variant. (Tyson Koschik/CBC)

Earlier on Monday, the WSO demanded that the citychange what it called a "discriminatory" rule included in its contracts that requiresecurity guards in some settings to be clean-shaven.

The organization called onthe city tocompensate and order its contractors to reinstate about100 bearded Sikh guardslost their jobs due to the requirement.

The WSO said the public health requirement has been in place at congregate settings since January and thesecurity guards work for contractors such asGardaWorld, ASP Security and Star World.

The city confirmed that employees and contractors working with itsShelter, Support and Housing Administration (SSHA) department must wear a N95 maskandmust be clean-shaven. It said themasks provideeffective protection against COVID-19 transmission.

Butthe city said the WSO'scomplaint stems fromcontractors failing to accommodate their own employees.

Shaving beard 'like peeling off my skin,' guard says

Sikh security guards have been struggling with the rule.

"I feel very humiliated," saidBirkawal Singh Anand, who works forASP Security.

"If you ask me to clean shave my beard, it's like peeling off my skin."

Anandsaidhe applied for a religious accommodation when he was notified of the requirement last month, butwas told that would mean being relegated to a lower position with the company withlower pay.

He saidhis previous positionworking as a security guard at city respite centres was recognized as a "skilled" job by the federal government and helped him work toward permanent residency. The new jobs offered, however, do not.

He said he and other guards many who are also working toward permanent residencyhave to choose between those new jobs, findinga different job, getting laid off, orshaving their beards.

'Few good options'

CBC News has reached out to the named security firmswithquestions about how they areimplementing the city policy.

According to an email statement from ASP Security, the company is looking for moreclarification from the city before it can recall six employees who declined to accept "comparable alternative positions" at non-city sites and were laid off as a result.

The company says all 13 affected guards were offered alternative positions at higher rates of pay,which wouldn't impact any employee's immigration status.Three workers accepted them, while four abided by the rule, the firm said.

"The city's clean-shaven policy has put our company in a difficult situation with few good options," said Debbie Ciccotelli, ASP vice president of strategic initiatives, in an email statement.

"We simply cannot offer our employees comparable positions with the city because we do not have any available."

The company states that each employee could return to their job ifthe requirement was removed. But in the meantime, itsays it will reach out to the city to find a solution.

GardaWorld, in an email to CBC News, said that all employeeswho were unable to meet this health and safety requirement set out by the city were offered "other and equivalent opportunities within the organization" until the measure islifted.

Lawyer urged city to find a solution

For Sikh devotees, leaving hair uncut is an important tenet of their faith, the WSO said.

Balpreet Singh, a lawyer with the organization,said Toronto's rule feels particularly discriminatory because this policy is being brought in while almost all other pandemic restrictions have been dropped in Ontario including most mask mandates.

Security guards were used commonly throughout the pandemic. At the city of Toronto respite centres, many guards were contracted by the city to help manage security in the shelters. (Maggie MacPherson/CBC)

"These security guards served at the height of the pandemic without these rules,when things were at their worst," Singh said.

"But now when, you know, vaccines are very common and things are opening up, they're being told:'No, you can't serve here because you've got a beard.'"

Singh saidhe's repeatedly contacted the city and council members. He said he sent an official letter to the city on June 7 to "work with its security contractors to find a solution."

Make accommodations, city tells contractors

The city is it investigating the complaint by the WSO and said all of the workers affected are employed by contractors and not its own corporate security division.

"City staff work to ensure policies are inclusive, and policies are assessed routinely to ensure they respect the rights and freedoms of all those who work for the city be they full-time or part-time employees, or employees of contractors," the city said in the release.

The city added it abides by human rights legislation and it expects itscontractors toabide by itshuman rights and anti-harassment/discrimination policyas well as human rights legislation.

It said it has granted seven accommodation requests to its own employees who have sought religious exemptions in shelter settings and expects such accommodations, if requested by contract employees, to also be granted by contractors to those employees.

Earlier, the WSO's Singh said his organization has attempted to work with contractors and contact the city in recent months to bring in alternative options to keep Sikh guards on the job and keep them healthy, but those efforts have been met with "nothing more than platitudes."

Singh said his organization will consider legal action if there's no change.

"This is clearly a violation of human rights protections in Ontario."

With files from Carly Thomas