Ontario to introduce $15 minimum wage for app-based gig workers
The Ontario government is set to introduce new legislation Monday that will give app-based gig workers “fundamental rights,” including a $15 minimum wage and transparency when it comes to their tips.
The “Digital Platform Workers’ Rights Act” will guarantee a regular minimum wage for individuals employed by app-based services, such as ride-share drivers and couriers, which they will receive on top of their tips. It also makes it mandatory for workers to receive a recurring pay period and pay day while prohibiting tips from being withheld by platform operators.
“We continue to hear stories that, you know, one week a gig worker will make $1,400 and the next week they'll make $500, and they don't know why,” Ontario Labour Minister Monte McNaughton told CTV News Toronto.
“So we're going to bring forward a transparency, so workers know exactly how the algorithm works and how they're going to be paid.”
McNaughton said he has heard from some workers who are making less than $5 an hour and he called that situation “unacceptable.”
“Every worker in the province deserves to earn at least minimum wage, and these companies have a responsibility—and they're going to be forced by law—to clearly tell workers on digital platforms how and when they're going to be paid.”
The legislation also includes the right for work-related disputes to be resolved in Ontario. According to McNaughton, many employees are forced to travel outside of Canada in order to address a workplace dispute, something that is not always affordable.
“It is clearly unacceptable that these injustices are happening in Ontario, and in Canada quite frankly,” he said. “No gig worker should earn less than minimum wage. No gig worker should be fired without notice or explanation. And no one, period, should have to travel out of Canada to have a workplace dispute resolved. That's why we're taking action.”
The Progressive Conservative government increased the minimum wage in Ontario to $15 an hour in January, choosing to also include liquor servers who were previously making $12.55 per hour.
Gig workers were not included in that legislation.
McNaughton acknowledged that government “often lags behind economic changes,” adding that the Progressive Conservatives moved quickly to address recommendations being made by the Ontario Workforce Recovery Advisory Committee.
The committee suggested a new class of employee be created to cover workers employed by platform-based services, allowing them access to basic rights such as a minimum wage, benefits and severance.
While the new legislation proposed Monday addresses the issue of a consistent minimum wage as well as issues of transparency when it comes to the workplace, it doesn’t mention a portable benefits package, something the Progressive Conservative government has said could come after the provincial June election.
McNaughton previously told CTV News Toronto an advisory panel will be appointed in March and the final recommendations will be made in July.
Ontario Premier Doug Ford originally scrapped a $15 minimum wage in 2018 after taking office, arguing that it would be too expensive for businesses. When he announced the minimum wage would increase by $1 in November 2021, the premier cited the pandemic as the main reason why the wage freeze would come to an end.
“Everyone's been facing a challenge over the last 20 months,” he said at the time. “Things were a lot different back in 2018.”
Speaking to reporters late Monday morning, Ford reiterated that times have changed and he is a strong believer in putting money back in people’s pockets.
“We’ve seen huge shifts around traditional labour markets,” he said. “ And as we build a resilient economy, our government must keep pace with these changes.”
“Protecting our digital platform workforce is more than just making sure that our labour laws stay up to date. It’s about achieving our promise to make Ontario the best place anywhere to live, work and raise a family.”
Ride-share apps appear to be on board with the proposal, saying their drivers deserve protections and that the Ontario legislation is a good “starting point.”
In a statement, Lyft said that “drivers deserve benefits and protections while also maintaining their flexibility to earn when, where and for however long they want.”
“This proposal seems to offer a good starting point in that conversation, and we look forward to continuing to engage with all stakeholders on the issue."
Uber, meanwhile, has been pushing for a much higher minimum wage of $18 and say that while they would like to provide their drivers with benefits, they cannot do so without regional legislation to support it.
A spokesperson also said in a statement that Uber’s platform already provides drivers with transparency regarding how their earnings are calculated.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
BREAKING Trump chooses anti-vaccine activist Robert F. Kennedy Jr. as health secretary
U.S. President-elect Donald Trump says he will nominate anti-vaccine activist Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to lead the Department of Health and Human Services, putting him in charge of a massive agency that oversees everything from drug, vaccine and food safety to medical research and the social safety net programs Medicare and Medicaid.
LIVE UPDATES Rogers Centre opens its doors to thousands of Taylor Swift fans for the first sold-out show
Taylor Swift is in Toronto to perform her first of six sold-out shows at the Rogers Centre tonight.
Purolator workers won't handle Canada Post packages if strike occurs, union says
Teamsters Canada says if Canada Post workers go on strike or are locked out, its members at Purolator won't handle any packages postmarked or identified as originating from the carrier.
Canada urged to cut government-funded research collaborations with China: report
A newly released report is urging Canada to immediately end all government-funded research collaborations with China in a variety of different areas.
Measles cases in New Brunswick continues to climb
The number of measles cases in New Brunswick continues to climb. Officials with New Brunswick’s Department of Health said as of Thursday, the number of confirmed cases since October has reached 43.
Police release bodycam video of officer-involved incident at Hindu temple protest in Brampton, Ont.
Police say an officer who forcefully removed a 'weapon' from a protester outside of a Hindu temple in Brampton was acting 'within the lawful execution of his duties' after bystander video of the incident circulated widely online.
Here's how a potential Canada Post strike may affect Canadians
A disruption in Canada Post services would hit some Canadians harder than others. As the deadline approaches for a potential strike at midnight Friday, CTVNews.ca asked readers how it would affect them and how they are preparing.
Partial confinement lifted in Longueuil after CN train derailment and chemical spill
The City of Longueuil has partially lifted the confinement measure currently in effect around the site of a CN train derailment near Jacques-Cartier West Boulevard and Saint-Georges Street after the incident spilt an unknown quantity of hydrogen peroxide Thursday morning.
New Pentagon report on UFOs includes hundreds of new incidents but no evidence of aliens
The Pentagon's latest report on UFOs has revealed hundreds of new reports of unidentified and unexplained aerial phenomena but no indications suggesting an extraterrestrial origin.