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Ontario’s Working for Workers Acts were never designed as a single moment of change. They are a series of layered updates that, over time, have significantly expanded employer obligations around hiring practices, harassment prevention, documentation, and transparency.
By January 2026, many of these requirements are no longer “new.” That’s exactly why they pose risk.
When rules settle into the background, organizations assume they’re already compliant. In reality, gaps tend to appear in job postings, recruitment follow-up, policy language, and record retention. For automotive employers operating in a fast-moving, decentralized environment, those gaps add up quickly.
This article breaks down what matters now and offers a practical checklist to start the year on solid footing.
Ontario’s legislative changes under the Working for Workers framework have touched multiple areas of HR, but three themes continue to surface in enforcement and advisory conversations:
How harassment is defined and addressed
How hiring and job postings are handled
How well employers can document and prove compliance
The intent behind these changes is consistent: reduce ambiguity and increase accountability. For employers, that means less reliance on informal practices and more emphasis on systems, training, and records.
One of the most important shifts is the expanded definition of workplace harassment.
Harassment is no longer limited to in-person interactions. Virtual and online conduct, including emails, text messages, messaging platforms, and video calls, are explicitly in scope.
For automotive employers, this matters because:
A significant amount of communication now happens digitally
Multi-location teams rely on messaging tools
Conflicts and complaints increasingly originate online, not on the shop floor
What this means in practice
Harassment and respectful workplace policies must explicitly reference virtual conduct
Reporting procedures must apply equally to digital interactions
Managers need guidance on how to handle issues that occur outside traditional physical workplaces
Policies that rely on vague language or assume in-person interactions only are no longer sufficient.
Ontario’s rules around publicly advertised job postings continue to require careful attention.
Employers must ensure:
Salary or salary range transparency where required
Retention of job postings for three years, even after roles are filled
Clear documentation of recruitment processes
An often-missed requirement is the obligation to inform unsuccessful candidates within 45 days after a hiring decision is made for a publicly advertised position.
This requirement affects:
Dealerships with high-volume hiring
Groups using multiple posting platforms
Teams relying on recruiters or external job boards
If there is no clear process for tracking applicants and communicating outcomes, this obligation is easy to miss.
January reality check:
If someone asked your team to show when and how unsuccessful candidates were notified, could you do it quickly?
A consistent theme across the Working for Workers changes is record retention.
Employers are expected to keep:
Job postings
Application records
Training completion logs
Policy acknowledgements
Harassment complaint documentation
The issue is rarely that records don’t exist. It’s that they are fragmented across inboxes, shared drives, and paper files.
When documentation can’t be produced efficiently, employers are exposed, regardless of intent.
While this article focuses on Ontario, automotive employers operating across provinces need to be mindful of differences elsewhere.
For example, Prince Edward Island has proposed changes to vacation entitlement milestones, reducing the threshold for three weeks’ vacation from eight years of service to five. While not yet in force, organizations should already be considering how accrual systems and payroll configurations would adapt if implemented.
The takeaway is not to overreact, but to plan. Employment standards continue to evolve, and systems that cannot accommodate change quickly create unnecessary risk.
Use this as a practical starting point for Q1.
Policy Updates
Confirm harassment policies include virtual and online conduct
Ensure reporting and investigation procedures are clearly defined
Review respectful workplace language for consistency with current definitions
Hiring & Recruitment
Audit publicly advertised job postings for transparency compliance
Confirm postings are retained for at least three years
Implement or validate a process to notify unsuccessful candidates within 45 days
Training
Refresh manager training on harassment prevention and response
Ensure training completion is documented and easily retrievable
Reinforce expectations around digital communication conduct
Documentation & Systems
Centralize hiring, training, and policy records where possible
Reduce reliance on email-only documentation
Validate that records can be produced quickly if requested
Ontario’s expectations are no longer theoretical. They are operational.
For automotive employers, strong compliance creates:
Clearer decision-making for managers
Greater consistency across locations
Reduced exposure during audits or complaints
Stronger trust with employees
The goal is not perfection. It’s defensibility.
The Working for Workers Acts have reshaped how employment standards are applied in Ontario. By January 2026, the question is no longer whether these rules apply, but whether your systems reflect them.
A short, focused compliance review now can prevent much larger issues later in the year.
Employment standards and health & safety expectations are continuing to evolve, and staying compliant isn’t always straightforward, especially across provinces.
If you have questions about how these changes apply to your dealership or dealer group, or want to better understand where your current processes may be exposed, our advisory team is here to help.
Connect with our advisory team to talk through your questions, review your current approach, and learn how to stay compliant without adding unnecessary complexity.
Dealer Communication & Engagement
Keywords: Ontario Working for Workers Act, Ontario employment law automotive, dealership HR compliance Ontario, automotive HR compliance Ontario, Ontario workplace harassment requirements