Contents:
Summary
Text of Legislation
Policy Interpretation
Related Information
This section outlines the director’s powers to ensure compliance with the Employment Standards Act.
85. (1) For the purposes of ensuring compliance with this Act and the regulations, the director may do one or more of the following:
(a) enter during regular working hours any place, including any means of conveyance or transport, where
(i) work is or has been done or started by employees,
(ii) an employer carries on business or stores assets relating to that business,
(iii) a record required for the purposes of this Act is kept, or
(iv) anything to which this Act applies is taking place or has taken place;
(b) inspect, and question a person about, any work, material, appliance, machinery, equipment or other thing in the place;
(c) inspect any records that may be relevant to an investigation under this Part;
(d) on giving a receipt for a record examined under paragraph (c), remove the record to make copies or extracts;
(e) require a person to disclose, either orally or in writing, a matter required under this Act and require that the disclosure be under oath or affirmation;
(f) require a person to produce, or to deliver to a place specified by the director, any records for inspection under paragraph (c).
(2) Despite subsection (1), the director may enter a place occupied as a private residence only with the consent of the occupant or under the authority of a warrant issued under section 120.
The director has extensive powers to investigate complaints.
The director has the authority to question any person who may have information relating to a complaint, including, but not limited to, the employer and its employees, consultants, accountants, bookkeepers, contractors, clients, or suppliers of goods or services.
Subsection (1)
To ensure compliance with the Act, the director has the authority to :
Subsection (2)
The director can only enter a private residence with the permission of the occupant, or with a warrant. The need to access a residence may occur when an employer operates out of their private residence, or when business records are kept at a private residence. This situation may also arise in the case of a domestic worker. (Refer to Part 14, Section 120 of the Act, Warrant to carry out inspection powers).
Employment Standards Tribunal Decisions
HOC Hyperbaric Care Centre Inc., BC EST #D550/99
Maan Farms Ltd., BC EST #D038/10
Related sections of the Act or Regulation
ESA
ESR