Thursday, August 29, 2013

Fired 80-year-old employees get $1.16 million

By: At Work, Published on Tue Aug 27 2013
    
Two recent decisions of the Ontario Superior Court send a clear message that employees who work into their 70s and even their 80s may be entitled to large damage awards if they are wrongfully dismissed.
This applies regardless of whether the employees are highly-paid former owners who expected to continue working after the business was sold or a modestly-paid machine operator.
Paul and Shirley Filiatrault were both over 80 in 2009 when they sold Tri-County Welding Supplies Ltd. to Air Liquide Canada Inc., and were subsequently fired. The Filiatraults took Air Liquide to court and in May, recovered $1.16 million in damages as severance pay.
Paul Filiatrault founded Tri-County in 1967 following a career with Air Liquide in Quebec where he started working at age 18. Tri-County was distributor for Air Liquide in the Kitchener area, where the Filiatraults moved.
An agreement signed in 1996 gave the Filiatraults the right to trigger a purchase of Tri-County’s shares by Air Liquide when they were ready to sell, at a price set by a share purchase formula.  
The agreement also said that when Tri-Country was sold, the Filiatraults’ three sons — company executives — could keep their jobs for at least three years. There were no similar provision for Paul and Shirley. The sale was completed in mid-September 2009 and four days later the senior Filiatraults were fired.
At the time, Paul was president and CEO and Shirley was vice president of Human Resources. Both were still very active in running the business.
Justice Beth Allen did not accept Air Liquide’s argument that the owners could be fired without notice because the agreement did not specifically cover their terms of future employment.
She ruled that the $11 million the Filiatraults received did not mean they had to resign or retire if the company was sold.
In spite of their 42 years of service, the Filiatraults agreed that damages be capped at 18 months. Using a five-year average of each of their salaries for 18 months, the judge awarded $898,950 to Paul and $262,500 to Shirley.
In contrast, Niranjan Kotecha worked as a machine operator for 20 years at auto parts company Affinia Canada ULC. In, 2010 he earned $44,000 and when he was fired a year later at the age of 70, the company gave him severance of $14,657.
Kotecha subsequently applied to over 225 companies for work, but was not granted a single interview. He sued his former employer, seeking 22 months of pay in lieu of notice (24 months minus two months of working notice.)
Affinia admitted that Kotecha was fired without cause and the only issue before the court was the appropriate amount of damages he should have received.
Based on 22 months of pay at an average annual salary of $44,000, in late July Justice Peter Hambly awarded him $83,795 minus the $14,657 he already received.
These cases illustrate that with the elimination of mandatory retirement, long service employees over 65 who are fired without cause can expect to receive damages for up to two years or more, even if they were not employed in professional or senior management positions.
In order to limit liability in wrongful dismissal cases, many companies now require employees to enter into employment contracts that clarify the rights and obligations of both parties beyond legislated minimum notice periods in the event of a dismissal. In unionized workplaces, these issues are typically covered in the collective agreement.
 

Thursday, August 22, 2013

Canadians Want a National Strategy for Seniors Health Care


CALGARY - A poll released by the Canadian Medical Association says most people want a national strategy for seniors health care which includes an emphasis on keeping them in their homes as long as possible.

The Ipsos Reid poll, done annually as part of the association's national report card on health issues, said that 93 per cent of those surveyed indicated any such plan should address care at homes, hospitals, hospices and long-term facilities.

An equal number suggested the entire system could be improved by keeping seniors at home as long as possible, thereby lightening the load on hospitals and nursing homes.

"The results of this year’s CMA report card send a clear and direct message to policy-makers and public office-holders that all levels of government need to act to address the demographic tsunami that is heading toward the health-care system," association president Dr. Anna Reid said in a release.

Reid said research shows it costs $126 a day to provide care for a patient in long-term care versus $842 a day in a hospital. But making it easier for seniors to stay at home while getting the care they need would be the preferred and most "cost-effective option," she said.

The poll, conducted between July 17 and July 26 by phone with 1,000 Canadians, has a margin of error of 3.1 percentage points, plus or minus, 19 times out of 20.

Other results from the poll found 89 per cent of those surveyed believed a national approach to seniors care should involve federal, provincial, territorial and municipal levels of government. And 78 per cent suggested the federal government has an important role to play in developing a strategy.

Only four out of 10 felt that hospitals and long-term care facilities in their area could handle the needs of seniors not able to stay at home. The same proportion said they were confident in the current health system’s ability to serve Canada’s aging population.

"The anxiety Canadians have about health care in their so-called golden years is both real and well-founded,” Reid noted.

"Let there be no doubt that a national strategy for seniors health care should be a federal priority."

The medical association's annual convention is being held in Calgary and runs until Wednesday.

Federal Health Minister Rona Ambrose was scheduled to address the meeting Monday.Canadian Medical Association Report Card: National Senior Health Care Strategy Wanted

CP  |  By Bill Graveland The Canadian Press

Thursday, August 15, 2013

Seniors are Good for Business

Seniors are a large and growing market!

• Seniors are one of the fastest growing population groups in Canada. In 2000, one out
of every eight people in Canada was 65 or older. By 2026, it is estimated that one out of
every five people will be a senior.

• By 2016 at the latest, Canada will have far more seniors than children aged 14 and under,
a phenomenon never before recorded.


Seniors have disposable income and can impact on your business!
 
Today’s seniors generally have more leisure time and disposable income than members of other
age groups.

Seniors’ households in Canada spent a total of $69 billion in 1996.
 
RETAILERS: seniors are modifying their homes!
89% of seniors want to “age in place”. Many seniors are modifying their homes to help them do so.
Important opportunities exist for retailers whose products can help seniors remain in their homesdespite the increasing frailty that develops with age.


HOTELIERS: seniors are traveling more than ever
Tourism is a big winner in an aging population because older people have the time, money and
desire to travel.

 In 1999, seniors made an average of more than 3 trips per person in Canada.