Thanksgiving: Another punishing holiday courtesy of Nova Scotia

KJIPUKTUK (Halifax) – Thanksgiving, Mon. Oct. 14, is not a paid holiday for many workers in Nova Scotia. That is because for employees, who are not union members, Thanksgiving is not one of the six annual “general paid holidays”. However if you lived in Alberta, BC, Manitoba, Northwest Territories, Nunavut, Ontario, Quebec, Saskatchewan or Yukon — you would have the day off with pay as it’s a statutory holiday. It’s also a paid holiday if your workplace is governed by federal labour law — such as radio, tv, airlines, banks or Canada Post.

But in the four Atlantic provinces, Thanksgiving is not a statutory holiday.

Back to Nova Scotia

In NS, if you work in hospitality, in a restaurant, a gas station, a bar, a convenience store or a small grocery store – for example – you may well have to work on Thanksgiving Day.  And if you do work, there is no extra pay, no premium pay. 

(credit: Unsplash.com)

Thanksgiving: a Punishing Holiday

Thanksgiving, while not a general holiday, is a retail closing day in Nova Scotia. Most retail shops and services, including offices, large grocery or drug stores, hardware stores, retail malls must close on Monday.  Employees will get the day off – but they will not be paid for the holiday, unless the boss feels like paying them.  This is what I call a Punishing Holiday — stores and services must close so employees cannot work — but they do not get paid for the day off.

Another issue is this: If you do work in a place permitted to be open (the list is here and it’s long:  –see p. 19-20), you do not have the right to refuse to work on the  Thanksgiving Day. And if you work, you will have to work for regular pay, not time and a half or holiday pay.

In Nova Scotia, most unions have negotiated a paid holiday for their members on Thanksgiving Day.  For the non-unionized, expect a cut to your pay of 20% this week — yet you may get Monday off work. 

Painting at the top: Paraskeva Clark, Myself (detail), 1933. Canadian. Oil on canvas, 101.6 × 76.7 cm. National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa. For more on the artist, look at this.

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