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Sunday, July 13, 2025

How a Kelowna painter skirted employment law and got $3,000 in severance - iNFOnews

Kelowna News

Ben Bulmer

Image Credit: PEXELS

In a highly unusual move, an Okanagan construction worker has circumnavigated B.C. employment law and managed to get $3,000 out of his employer when he was laid off.

The employer argued it didn't have to pay him because under the BC Employment Standards Act construction workers aren't entitled to severance pay when they're laid-off.

However, the painter took his former boss to the online small claims court which ruled in his favour.

The details are laid out in a Feb. 7 BC Civil Resolution Tribunal decision, which says painter Iain Lewis was hired by Kelowna firm Hanington Painting in May 2022.

The company paid Lewis $20 an hour but at the end of the following summer laid him off, with no severance pay.

On Lewis' record of employment, Hanington Painting listed "shortage of work/end of contract or season" as the reason for Lewis' unemployment.

Lewis then took his former employer to the Civil Resolution Tribunal arguing he was owed severance pay.

The decision said that under the Employment Standards Act companies have to compensate workers if they are laid off without cause. The law states employees get one week of pay for each year worked up to eight weeks.

However, the Employment Standards Act also states that this rule doesn't apply to companies whose main business is construction.

"Hanington says its principal business is construction and Mr. Lewis worked at one or more construction sites. So, it argues this means Mr. Lewis...



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