Ontario repeals Bill 124, wage restraint law twice found unconstitutional

Critics have said constrained pay drove nurses out of health-care sector

Image | Ont-Legislature 20231206

Caption: Ontario's top court ruled recently that a law that capped salary increases for broader public sector workers at one per cent a year for three years violated collective bargaining rights. (Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press)

An Ontario public sector wage-restraint law that advocates and opposition critics blamed for heightening a health-care staffing crisis is now officially off the books after it was twice declared unconstitutional.
The province's top court ruled recently that a law that capped salary increases for broader public sector workers at one per cent a year for three years violated collective bargaining rights, largely upholding a lower court ruling.
Hours after the Appeal Court ruling, the government announced that it would repeal the law, known as Bill 124, something that opposition critics, labour advocates and health-care workers had long urged.
WATCH | Premier reacts to court ruling:

Media Video | CBC News Toronto : Ford says government 'respects' Bill 124 appeal ruling

Caption: A day after the Ontario Court of Appeal ruled his government’s wage-cap law on public sector workers was unconstitutional, Premier Doug Ford commented on the decision publicly, saying: "People elect the parliament, they should make the decisions."

Open Full Embed in New Tab (external link)Loading external pages may require significantly more data usage.
The government announced Friday in a brief news release that it has repealed Bill 124 in its entirety through an order in council, which is a government order recommended by cabinet and signed by the lieutenant-governor.
The Progressive Conservatives enacted the law in 2019 as a way to help the government eliminate a deficit.
The law applied to workers including teachers and nurses, and advocates and critics have said the constrained pay, particularly coming during the COVID-19 pandemic, drove nurses out of the sector.'