Canadian Payroll Reporter - sample

June 2019

Focuses on issues of importance to payroll professionals across Canada. It contains news, case studies, profiles and tracks payroll-related legislation to help employers comply with all the rules and regulations governing their organizations.

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5 Canadian HR Reporter, a HAB Press business 2019 ASK AN EXPERT Annie Chong MANAGER OF CARSWELL'S PAYROLL CONSULTING GROUP annie.chong@thomsonsreuters.com | (416) 298-5085 Including overtime pay when calculating vacation pay QUESTION: Is overtime pay automatically included when calculating the amount of vacation pay owing to an individual employee? ANSWER: Under employment standards law, overtime pay is included when calcu- lating vacation pay in all Canadian jurisdic- tions, except for the western provinces of Alberta and Manitoba. Other common earnings to include when calculating vacation pay are regular wages, work-related bonuses, commissions, and statutory holiday pay (in some jurisdictions). For more information on earnings in- cluded and excluded when calculating vaca- tion pay, contact the applicable employment standards board. Employment standards rules in most provinces and territories require that em- ployers pay employees vacation pay of at least four per cent or six per cent of their vacationable earnings, depending on their length of employment. For jurisdiction-specific requirements, payroll professionals are advised to refer to the applicable jurisdiction's employment standards legislation or labour ministry website. Retaining vacation pay records QUESTION: How long do we have to keep records related to an employee's vacation pay? ANSWER: Since vacation pay is subject to source deductions for the Canada/Que- bec Pension Plan, employment insurance, Quebec Parental Insurance Plan, and in- come tax, the Canada Revenue Agency and Revenu Québec (for employers with Quebec payrolls) require employers to keep records on vacation pay for at least six years from the end of the last tax year to which they apply. Employers may apply for permission to destroy records before that time. Employers must also comply with employment stan- dards rules for keeping records related to vacation pay. The following table sets out the minimum retention period for vacation pay records under employment standards laws across the country: When vacation entitlement begins QUESTION: Do employees begin to accumulate their entitlement to vacation pay on their first day of work or can we delay it until they pass a probationary period (for example, three or six months)? ANSWER: In general, employment stan- dards laws across Canada require that em- ployees begin to accumulate vacation pay entitlement from the time they begin work- ing for an employer, meaning that they do not have to serve a probationary period be- fore accumulating vacation entitlement. It is important to point out that in British Columbia, employees begin to accumulate vacation from the first day of employment if they are employed for more than five days. Employees who are employed for five or fewer days are not entitled to vacation pay. A similar requirement applies in New- foundland and Labrador. Jurisdiction Retention period for vacation records Canada Labour Code Three years after work is performed Alberta Three years from the date the record is made British Columbia Two years after termination of employment Manitoba Three years after the record is made New Brunswick 36 months after work is performed Newfoundland and Labrador Four years from the date the last entry is made for the employee Northwest Territories Two years after the record is made Nova Scotia 36 months after work is performed Nunavut Two years after the record is made Ontario Five years after the record is made Prince Edward Island 36 months after work is performed Quebec Three years after work is performed Saskatchewan Employers must keep records covering the most recent five years of employment for each employee. If an employee's employment terminates, employers must keep these records for an additional two years after the date employment ends Yukon For 12 months after work is performed

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