Labour Day is a public holiday – but will you get paid?

This is an updated version of an article originally published in the NS Advocate here.

KJIPUKTUK (Halifax) – Despite Labour Day (Mon. Sept. 2) being a public holiday, and a retail closing day in Nova Scotia – some grocery stores are allowed to open—if they are smaller than 4,000 square feet. Also allowed to remain open are flea markets, fish stores, laundromats, pool halls, and even used clothing stores, according to the Retail Business Designated Day Closing Act. Of course, gas bars, hotels, restaurants and bars are allowed to stay open, mainly because they cater to tourists.

On the 100th anniversary of Bloody Sunday in Winnipeg, June 21, 2019, this new street sculpture commemorated the overturning of the streetcar (above) by striking workers.

But what about pay? In Nova Scotia, Labour Day is one of the six paid holidays in the year.  If your workplace is closed that day, or you do not work that day, you are entitled to a day off with pay.

How to qualify for holiday pay on Labour Day

To qualify for the day off with pay, you need to have worked 15 of the last 30 days; and you have to have worked your last scheduled shift before Labour Day, and your first scheduled shift after the holiday.

So many employers keep staff on part time hours, it’s sometimes hard to find out if you qualify for a paid day off.  

If your regular day off is Monday, then – if you qualify – you should get another day off with pay, which substitutes for the Labour Day holiday.

If you qualify for the paid day off, but you have to work on Labour Day, you are entitled to your normal day’s pay, plus time-and-a-half for the hours you do work that day. 

Helen Armstrong’s rap sheet. She was arrested for disorderly conduce on the first day of the Winnipeg General Strike.

Calculate your holiday pay…

If you normally work 8 hours per day at $20/hr, (note: minimum wage in NS is now $15.20 per hour) you should get $160 for a day’s work.  On Labour Day, if you have to work only 5 hours, that works out to 5 x $20.00 =  $100, plus half again as much $50.00. So if you do work Labour Day and you qualify for the holiday pay, and you only work 5 hours on Labour Day – you’d earn $160+ $100 + $50.50 =  $310.00.

If you are in a union, you will certainly get paid for the day off as a holiday, and under your collective agreement, there should be better terms if you must work on Labour Day.

Happy Labour Day.

Helen Armstrong poses with women retail workers at Woolworths’ whom she led off the job during the Winnipeg General Strike. Helen has the X above her head. (Manitoba Archives/Helen Armstrong fonds)

A good article about women in the Winnipeg General Strike is by Mary Horodyski, in Manitoba History, #11, Spring 1986. Here is Women and the Winnipeg General Strike of 1919.

For another look at women’s role, especially that of “Ma” Armstrong, read this.

Featured Photograph at the top: A crowd of demonstrators overturns a streetcar in front of Winnipeg’s city hall on June 21, 1919 during the Winnipeg General Strike (Manitoba Archives).

Judy Haiven is on the steering committee of Equity Watch, an organization that fights discrimination, bullying and racism in the workplace.  Contact her at equitywatchns@gmail.com

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