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SMALL BUSINESS
Human Rights Complaints Can Be Serious Business for B.C. Employers
Business Wire
A workplace human rights complaint can cost an employer money, time and
reputation. Small business employers, which are 43% of B.C. businesses,
can be hit especially hard if the case goes to a B.C. Human Rights
Tribunal hearing. Legal fees might reach $20,000 to $30,000.
Helping small business respond to a human rights complaint is the
purpose of a seminar offered by the B.C. Human Rights Coalition, a
community-based non-profit working to promote and strengthen human
rights in the province.
The Human Rights Toolkit for Small Business shows employers how to
navigate the Tribunal process and how a preventive approach with good
workplace policies can deal with small problems before they get bigger.
A key message to small business employers: What you don’t know can hurt
you.
The time factor is critical, according to Robyn Durling, Coalition
Communications Officer and seminar presenter. "The employer needs to
realize that there’s a window of opportunity to have the case dismissed
on various grounds. If that opportunity is missed, or mismanaged, then
the case is on track for a Tribunal hearing. That path can be costly for
a business even if the complaint is dismissed."
The aim of the seminar is to save both sides of a complaint from
needless proceedings and keep cases that should be resolved at an
earlier stage from going before the Tribunal.
Besides, “respect for human rights is good for business” says Susan
O’Donnell, Executive Director for the Coalition and long-time educator
on human rights and labour-management issues. “A strong human rights
policy in the workplace changes everything. Employee diversity is a
competitive advantage for B.C. business.”
The first Human Rights Toolkit seminar is scheduled for Tuesday,
December 1
st at Vancouver Waterfront Station - Small Business
B.C. offices, from 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. The cost is $35.
Future workshops are planned for different regions of the province in
consultation with local business communities
The project is funded through a Law Foundation of B.C. grant.
For more information or to register for the December 1
st
Vancouver seminar, please contact Diane Rodgers or Robyn Durling at the
B.C. Human Rights Coalition, phone: 604.689.8474, email:
info@bchrcoalition.org.
Copyright Business Wire 2009
2009-11-17 16:00:00
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