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Make paid sick leave mandatory for Yukon private businesses, panel suggests

A panel of Liberal and NDP MLAs, and members of the public, recommends that paid sick leave become mandatory for Yukon-based private employers.

COVID-19 pandemic proof that sick leave should be universal, MLA says

Emily Tredger, NDP MLA for Whitehorse Centre, co-chaired the Making Work Safe panel that recommends paid sick leave become mandatory for Yukon-based private employers. (Danielle D'Entremont/CBC)

A panel composed of Liberal and NDP MLAs, and members of the public, recommends making paid sick leave mandatory for Yukon-based private employers. 

The Making Work Safe panel made the recommendation along with 22 others in a sweeping report Monday afternoon. Over 500 people shared their feedback online with the panel on how permanent paid sick leave should be established in the territory.

Emily Tredger, the NDP MLA for Whitehorse Centre who co-chaired the panel, said the pandemic showed members of the panel that paid sick leave needs to be universal. 

"As an employer, when you're dealing with a pandemic and worker shortages ... having an optional thing sometimes doesn't make the cut," Tredger told reporters. "I think it's really important that this ... is for everyone." 

The panel is hoping that if their recommendations are taken by the Yukon government, paid sick leave will be in place come September. (Steve Silva/CBC)

Some of the panel's other recommendations are to make 10 paid sick leave available to all employees, including self-employed and gig workers without any payment delays. The panel also suggested that workers cannot be fired or let go from their jobs due to taking sick leave.

Minister of Community Services Richard Mostyn, a Liberal MLA and the panel's other co-chair, noted there's still a long road to find out whether the territory will adopt the recommendations. 

The report still has to be presented to party caucuses for discussion, he noted.

"Now government's got to determine how to actually deal with the recommendations," said Mostyn.

"There's a lot of work to be done to figure out how to implement such a program throughout the territory, how it's going to be funded." 

A man in a green tie speaks into a microphone.
Co-chair Richard Mostyn, minister of community services, said the report still needs to be presented to party caucuses, so details like timelines for implementation or how much money it will take are still up in the air. (Jane Sponagle/CBC)

The establishment of a paid sick leave program during the COVID-19 pandemic is one of the terms of the Confidence and Supply Agreement (CASA) that set out the working relationship between the Liberals and the NDP after the last territorial election, which resulted in a minority Liberal government.

In a later press release, the Yukon government explained that the panel's recommendations will work towards a permanent territory-wide program. 

If the recommendations are adopted, the panel hopes the government can make the necessary changes to the Employment Standards Act by September.

That's when the territory's current paid sick leave program, put in place during the pandemic, is set to expire.