Category Archives: News

RavenLaw Helps “Break the Cycle” with the Ottawa Rape Crisis Centre

RavenLaw was proud to support the 4th annual Ottawa Rape Crisis Centre Spin-A-Thon on Saturday, April 25th. The firm provided a financial donation to support the participation of a Ravenlaw team. The ORCC is dedicated to eradication violence against women and providing support to survivors and the people who love them. All proceeds from the event will go towards ongoing short- and long-term counseling for survivors, the 24-hour Crisis Line and raising awareness in the Ottawa community.

Ravenlaw lawyers Amanda Montague-Reinholdt, Dayna Steinfeld and Morgan Rowe participated in the 7-hour Spin-a-Thon with articling students Taylor Akin and Daniel Tucker-Simmons.

May Day: the Labour Movement’s Legacy

May 1st, also known as May Day or International Workers’ Day, has long stood as the date on which workers gather to celebrate the past victories of the labour movement and to advance ongoing concerns facing workers around the world. While May Day has its roots in the historical labour struggles in Canada and the United States, it has become a touchstone for worker’s rights and labour activism that remains relevant to this day.

History of May Day

In the late 19th century, when participating in union activity was a criminal act, workers in Canada and the United States joined in collective action to protest working conditions. This struggle centred on the fight for shorter working hours without a cut in pay. At the time, working conditions were dangerous and workers often had no choice but to work 10 hours a day or longer. Workers organized and agitated to fight for improvements in their working lives.

The Struggles of Canadian Workers

In Canada, the Toronto Typographical Union went on strike in 1872 as part of the “Nine-Hour Day” movement. Although this initial job action yielded little result, a parade held a few weeks later in support of the striking workers drew over 10,000 people. Meanwhile, George Brown, the editor of the Toronto Globe and a politician, sent the police after the striking workers, resulting in 24 arrests. This only further galvanized support for the striking workers, leading to further protest. In response, Prime Minister John A. MacDonald promised to repeal the anti-trade union laws which made participating in union activity criminal, and later the same year, the Trade Unions Act was passed.

In the years following this victory for Canadian workers, parades were organized to mark the catalyst Toronto job action. Eventually, in 1894, the federal government declared Labour Day an official holiday.

The American Origins of May Day

In the United States, the struggle for an 8-hour working day came to a head on May 1, 1886 when more than 300,000 workers across the country walked off the job in peaceful protest. In Chicago, 40,000 workers went on strike. The protest continued and the number of workers swelled each day.

On May 3, police in Chicago began to use violent measures against the striking workers. This led the Chicago workers to organize in protest of the police tactics on May 4. The events of May 4 are now referred to as the “Haymarket Affair”. Towards the end of the day of peaceful protest, when only a few hundred people remained at the protest at Haymarket Square, a delegation of approximately 160 weapons-bearing police officers marched on the Square to disperse the protest. As the police approached, a bomb was thrown, although to this day it is not known who threw it. In the panic that followed, the police began firing their rifles. In the end, seven police officers and four workers died.

The response to the Haymarket Affair was swift and severe. Martial law was declared across the country. Eight men from the labour movement were tried and convicted, with seven sentenced to hang.

In 1889, an American delegate to a labour convention in Paris asked that May 1 be declared International Labour Day to mark the deaths of the men who died in the Haymarket Affair. However, when President Grover Cleveland decided to declare an official holiday in “honour of the working man” in 1894, he chose to follow the Canadian example, recognizing the first Monday in September, instead of May 1, out of concern that celebrating May Day would encourage “rabble-rousing”.

May Day Today

Today, May Day remains an important date for commemorating the gains achieved by trade unionists in the late 19th century.

Even more importantly, however, May Day has become an international day of labour activism and protest to recognize that struggles that remain for workers today. Workers in countries across the world use this date to hold annual demonstrations advocating for advances to workers’ rights, such as increases to minimum wage, improvements to working conditions, and greater protections for the rights of vulnerable workers.

While May Day marches are sometimes contentious issues, with some governments seeking to ban them outright, May Day’s larger legacy is one of peaceful labour activism. It is a reminder of the progress that can be made when workers join together to pursue their goals collectively.

Limitation periods for long-term disability (LTD) claims

Applying for long-term disability (LTD) benefits can feel like a game of cat and mouse, in which the insurer repeatedly invites claimants to appeal the denial of benefits internally. Often these internal appeals are met with further denials. What many claimants may not realize is that, while these internal appeals and denials are occurring, the time limit to bring a court action continues to run.

In Ontario, most long-term disability (LTD) policies give you two years to sue the insurer, and a few provide even less time. This time limit is known as a “limitation period”, and you may be unable to claim lost benefits in court if you permit that period to expire.

Long-term disability (LTD) limitation periods: when does the clock start?

 

One important question is what event actually triggers the running of the limitation period. While it is impossible to predict in the abstract, the law in Ontario since December 2014 is that the two-year timeframe (or, more rarely, the one-year timeframe) begins to run the moment you receive an “unequivocal denial” of your claim.

In other words, the clock will start to run when the insurer clearly denies your claim. The fact that the insurer invites you to pursue an internal appeal does not mean that the limitation period is not running. Once your claim has been clearly denied, the lawsuit clock starts ticking, and the time limit is likely not restarted by bringing an internal appeal.

Consult a disability lawyer soon after the initial denial

The take-away from the law on limitation periods in long-term disability (LTD) claims is that you should take action quickly after your claim is first denied. Even if you are still pursuing internal appeals, do not assume they prolong your right to sue, because the opposite is likely true.

A disability lawyer with expertise in long-term disability benefits can provide you with specialized advice, including on the issue of whether your claim has been clearly denied and your time limit for suing the insurer has started. So once you’ve received that first denial, contact a lawyer for a consultation to decide whether you should commence an action, and to learn about what other legal options might be available to you.

We are here to help navigate the LTD application process. Consult one of our experienced Long Term Disability lawyers at Raven, Cameron, Ballantyne and Yazbeck LLP if you are considering making a claim for disability benefits or if your claim for benefits has been denied.  

[This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice, which cannot be given without consideration of your individual circumstances.]

 

RavenLaw Proud to Support the Ten Oaks Project Bowl-a-Thon

RavenLaw was proud to support this year’s Ten Oaks Project Camp Bowl-a-Thon. This annual event helps bring much-needed funds to the Ten Oaks Project organization and connects children and youth from LGBTQ+identities, families and communities with their supporters. This year’s event surpassed the $40,000 fundraising goal.

The Ten Oaks Project engages and connects children and youth from LGBTQ+ communities through programs and activities rooted in play.

 

RavenLaw Partnering with MESH Ottawa for Presentation on Disability Insurance Issues

On May 12, 2015,  RavenLaw lawyers Raphaëlle Laframboise-Carignan, Morgan Rowe and Dayna Steinfeld will be participating in a panel discussion on disability insurance issues as part of an International Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/ Fibromyalgia (ME/FM) Awareness Day event hosted by MESH Ottawa. Topics of discussion will include the duty to accommodate, Canada Pension Plan Disability, and short-term and long-term disability benefits. The panel will also feature Margaret Parlor, President of the National ME/FM Action Network, who will provide facts and background on Fibromyalgia and Chronic Fatigue Syndrome.

More information about the event, including how to register, can be found here.

Arbitrator finds Hospital Sick Leave Policy Discriminatory

In a recent arbitration decision, Ontario Public Service Employees Union, Local 464 v Ottawa Hospital, Arbitrator Mary Ellen Cummings found that the Ottawa Hospital’s application of its short-term sick leave benefits discriminated against employees with chronic disabilities, contrary to the Human Rights Code. The collective agreement language at issue in the case is common throughout most of the hospital sector in Ontario, and this decision sets an important precedent for how absences due to chronic illnesses must be handled in the province.

Background

The case related to sick leave benefits under the Hospitals of Ontario Disability Income Plan (“HOODIP”). Under HOODIP, employees have up to 15 weeks of short-term sick pay benefits for each period of absence. Article 16.03 in the Collective Agreement states: “No sick pay benefit is payable under HOODIP for the first fifteen hours of absence for the sixth and subsequent period(s) of absence in the same fiscal year”. The Ottawa Hospital applied this rule such that any absences separated by three weeks or more were treated as distinct “periods of absence”, even if the absences were all due to the same chronic illness. The Ontario Public Service Employees Union filed a policy grievance against the Hospital, arguing that this interpretation of “period of absence” discriminated against employees who have chronic illnesses that periodically reoccur (e.g. migraines, Crohn’s Disease).

Arbitrator’s Decision

The Arbitrator found that the use of a three-week gap to identify distinct periods of absence had an adverse impact on employees with chronic illnesses compared to other employees receiving sick leave benefits. Employees with frequent, short absences due to a chronic illness will reach their sixth and subsequent “period of absence” more quickly than other employees, due to the nature of their disability. Treating these absences as a “new ailment”, simply because they were separated by three weeks, failed to address the circumstances of employees with chronic illnesses.

Arbitrator Cummings further found that this discrimination was not justified as reasonable and bona fide. She rejected the Hospital’s argument that it would be too onerous to determine whether absences were due to a chronic disability, holding: “looking at the individual needs of employees with disabilities and determining to what extent accommodation is required is the minimum required of all employers under the Code.”

The grievance was allowed, and the Hospital was directed to stop counting absences separated by more than three weeks as a distinct period of absence when the employee has a chronic illness. The Arbitrator further directed the employer to look at absences of employees with chronic illnesses and determine whether the employee can be accommodated, and if so how. She emphasized that accommodation may take many possible forms, and so a single remedy would be inappropriate.

This Award sets an important precedent, not only for collective agreements in the hospital sector with similar language, but also more broadly for treatment of employees’ absences when they are due to a chronic, recurring illness. Arbitrator Cummings’ decision provides strong confirmation that there is not a ‘one size fits all’ approach to managing employees’ attendance, and employers must look at each individual’s circumstances and needs.

The Union was represented by Wassim Garzouzi and Amanda Montague-Reinholdt from Raven, Cameron, Ballantyne & Yazbeck LLP/s.r.l.

 

Andrew Astritis presents to Canadian Foundation for Labour Rights

Andrew Astritis recently spoke at a conference hosted by the Canadian Foundation for Labour Rights that examined three recent decisions from the Supreme Court of Canada on the issues of labour rights and the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. Andrew’s presentation addressed the implications of the Court’s decision in Saskatchewan Federation of Labour v Saskatchewan on essential services legislation. The conference was organized in conjunction with the Canadian Labour Congress Legal Challenges Committee and the Canadian Association of Labour Lawyers.