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Charlie Herrera Vacaflor, Senior Legal Consultant
(Last updated )

Charlie Herrera Vacaflor, Senior Legal Consultant
(Last updated )
As businesses adapt to the evolving demands of the 2026 labour market, managing economic shifts, technological integration, and restructuring, employers are frequently looking for ways to control costs. This often leads to considerations of reducing employee work hours, altering compensation, or implementing temporary layoffs.
As you weigh your operational options, understanding the interplay between provincial legislation and Canadian common law is paramount. Executing changes improperly can trigger a costly legal dispute known as a constructive dismissal claim.
Constructive dismissal occurs when an employer does not directly terminate an employee but unilaterally changes a fundamental term of the employment contract without the employee’s consent or a contractual right to do so. In the eyes of the law, the employer has repudiated the contract, allowing the employee to treat their employment as terminated.
Major triggers include:
Because constructive dismissal is legally treated as a termination, the employer becomes liable for the employee’s full severance entitlements under both employment standards legislation and, crucially, the common law.
If an employer imposes a unilateral change, the employee must express their lack of consent within a “reasonable time”. If they continue working under the new conditions for too long without protesting, the law may deem them to have condoned (accepted) the change.
There is no strict, universal statutory deadline across Canada for this. While recent jurisprudence, such as the Alberta Court of Appeal decision in Kosteckyj v. Paramount Resources Ltd., highlights that highly educated, well-resourced professionals may be expected to assess their options and object quickly (sometimes within weeks), this is highly fact specific. Courts assess “reasonable time” based on the employee's vulnerability, tenure, age, and access to legal counsel. Employers should never assume that a few weeks of silence equals legal consent.
Before altering wages, hours, or duties, review your employment agreements. You cannot unilaterally alter fundamental terms without a contractual right. If you need to change the terms, seek the employee's written consent. To make this amended contract legally binding, you must provide the employee with "fresh consideration"—a new benefit they were not already entitled to, such as a signing bonus, a wage increase, or additional vacation time.
The most common mistake Canadian employers make is assuming they have a legal right to temporarily lay off staff because it is outlined in provincial employment standards legislation.
The legal reality: At common law, any temporary layoff is automatically a constructive dismissal unless your employment contract explicitly contains a temporary layoff clause, or the employee agrees to it.
If you do have the contractual right to lay off an employee, you must then ensure the layoff does not exceed the statutory limits of your specific province, otherwise, it becomes a permanent termination:
Under the new provisions introduced by the Working for Workers Seven Act 2025, Ontario employers and their non-unionized employees can agree to an extended temporary layoff that lasts 35 or more weeks within a consecutive 52-week period, provided the layoff does not exceed 52 weeks within a consecutive 78-week period.
However, this is not an automatic employer right. To utilize this extended period without triggering a statutory termination, an employer must clear several specific administrative requirements:
After the employee is provided with the applicable notice of layoff under the Saskatchewan Employment Act (SEA), they can be off work for an indefinite amount of time before they are recalled back to their position.
Please note that the legislation alone can’t be a buffer from constructive dismissal claims. Unless the job contract gives you the right to temporarily layoff an employee, you are never completely protected.
If operational changes are necessary, communicate the business rationale clearly to your staff. Employees who understand the financial realities are more likely to consent to temporary reductions or mutually beneficial solutions. Furthermore, if you are selecting specific roles for restructuring, ensure your criteria are purely objective, documented, and entirely free from discriminatory bias to avoid human rights complaints.
Peninsula’s experts can help you update employment contracts and implement best practices to prevent constructive dismissal claims. We can also assist with any HR, health & safety, or employee management advice that you may need. To learn more about how our services can benefit your business, call an expert today at 1 (833) 247-3652.
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