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Ontario Liberal Party promises 10 paid sick days, higher minimum wage

Del Duca

The Ontario Liberal leader Steven Del Duca released a plank of his party’s 2022 election platform during an event in Toronto on Saturday.

The policies, which include promises around the minimum wage and paid sick days, were coined a “plan for economic dignity.”

Del Duca unveiled the plan surrounded by supporters and candidates at the party’s first in-person event of 2022.

He pledged to raise the minimum wage in Ontario to $16 per hour by Jan. 1, 2023, if elected premier.

He said the party would “urgently” develop a “living wage structure” that provides pay that corresponds to where Ontarians live in the province.

A regionally-adjusted living wage could be as high as $22 an hour in Toronto, advocates have said.

In January, the conservative Ontario government raised the minimum wage from $14.35 to $15 per hour, and from $12.55 per hour to $15 for liquor servers.

The NDP has also promised a $16 minimum wage as of Oct. 1, with plans to raise it to $20 an hour by 2026.

“I believe that economic dignity is far too important to be left to luck,” Del Duca told supporters.

The announcement also included the promise of 10 sick days for Ontario workers. The Ontario Liberal Party said it would ban employers from requiring a doctor’s note and reimburse up to $200 per day to businesses for workers who are off sick.

The party said the policy would cost approximately $800 million.