This information sheet tells about how the Labour Standards Code requires employers to keep records about employees.
Employers must keep employment records to show that employees receive at least the benefits they are entitled to under the Labour Standards Code. These records must be kept at the employers' main place of business and must be kept for at least 12 months after the work has been performed. As well, employers must be prepared to show that all outstanding pay has been paid. In the case of vacation pay, the employer must be able to show payroll records going back 28 months from the date a complaint was filed.
Employers must keep the following information:
Employers may keep employment records using any method from a manual system using a payroll book from a stationery store to a computerized bookkeeping/ payroll program. The records must be organized, easy to read, accurate, and up to date.
Employers must give employees pay stubs when paying their wages.
The pay stub must show
Labour Standards officers can inspect an employer's payroll records.
They also have the right to enter any work place at any reasonable time to inspect any place where people might work and to talk to any employee during or outside working hours. The Labour Standards Code also says that this can be done when the employer is not at the place of work.
Employers who fail to keep records or to keep them up to date and who fail to give information to the Director of Labour Standards or a Labour Standards officer may be guilty of a violation under the Labour Standards Code.