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			<title>No More Mandatory Retirement in BC</title>
			<link>http://www.abilitynotage.ca/index.php?option=com_content&amp;task=view&amp;id=143&amp;Itemid=2</link>
			<description>
On January 1, 2008 mandatory retirement became illegal in British Columbia with the exception of federally-regulated industries and specific occupations where it can be shown that mandatory retirement is justifiable as a bona fide occupational requirement.


Although we have achieved the purpose we set out to when we established this website, we will leave it operating for the foreseeable future so that others can fight against mandatory retirement in their own provinces and countries.


We thank the people of British Columbia who strongly supported us during our campaign to end mandatory retirement. This is their victory.


 

</description>
			<category>News - BC</category>
			<pubDate>Tue, 01 Jan 2008 01:00:00 +0100</pubDate>
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			<title>Few Firms Taking Steps to Retain Employees Past Retirement Age - June 23, 2007</title>
			<link>http://www.abilitynotage.ca/index.php?option=com_content&amp;task=view&amp;id=142&amp;Itemid=2</link>
			<description>
Few firms taking steps to retain employees past retirement age
Derek Sankey


Vancouver Sun
June 23, 2007 


More companies are deploying strategies to
retain older workers in the face of aging demographics and labour
shortages, but it appears the vast majority of firms still have a long
way to go in retaining and recruiting mature workers over 50.


Human
resource experts say that with the first round of baby boomers turning
60 this year, and labour shortages already apparent in most sectors,
younger workers and immigrants will not solve staffing challenges alone
as boomers look for the door.


 There&amp;#39;s been an awful lot of
off-ramps to get the older worker out, but there&amp;#39;s not a lot of
on-ramps to encourage people to stay or to return [to the workplace], 
says Dianne Bond, market vice-president for Right Management in Calgary.


A
recent Manpower survey showed that only 28 per cent of companies have a
formal strategy in place to retain older workers past retirement age,
while 18 per cent have a strategy to recruit older workers.


One
positive indication is that the majority of boomers want to remain in
the workforce, but it is going to require some innovative solutions to
make them stay or return. A Merrill Lynch report found 71 per cent of
people over the age of 50 want to work in  retirement,  while 38 per
cent of those want to alternate between work and leisure. An additional
17 per cent are looking for part-time work only.


Considering
there are about 11 million  mature workers  in a country with a
population of just over 32 million, according to Statistics Canada, it
represents enormous potential to ease labour shortages, which became
abundantly apparent in Alberta last year.  Now, the problem is more in
your face,  says Bond.


When it comes to developing effective
strategies, boomers and people over 50 are looking for some unique
things in the type of work they&amp;#39;re willing to take on. A Right
Management study found 40 per cent of those surveyed want flexible work
schedules, 22 per cent want  enhanced health care,  17 per cent desire
mentoring roles and 16 per cent look for leadership and professional
development opportunities.

</description>
			<category>News - Canada</category>
			<pubDate>Sat, 23 Jun 2007 01:00:00 +0100</pubDate>
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			<title>Retirement Changes Simply Recognize Basic Human Rights - June 3, 2007</title>
			<link>http://www.abilitynotage.ca/index.php?option=com_content&amp;task=view&amp;id=141&amp;Itemid=2</link>
			<description>
Retirement changes simply recognize basic human rights

Editorial


The Province
June 3, 2007 


You might have missed it behind the barrage
of headlines about our MLAs awarding themselves a fancy new pay raise.
But the ending of the current B.C. legislative session also saw an
historic milestone in social legislation.


As they pocketed their
gold-plated pension packages, the politicians also approved amendments
to the B.C. Human Rights Code, outlawing mandatory retirement at age 65.


B.C.
had been behind the trend on this issue -- Quebec ended age-related
discrimination in 1982. But the timing for this province could not be
better.


In the current economic boom, a shortage of skilled
workers threatens to limit severely B.C.&amp;#39;s ability to make the most of
its opportunities.


Seniors&amp;#39; minister Ida Chong has estimated a
need to fill more than one million vacancies over the next decade.
Naturally, not all these jobs will be filled by senior citizens. But at
least older workers will not be forced into early retirement against
their will.


The new law, to take effect Jan. 1 next year,
recognizes a dramatic shift in provincial demographics -- people are
living longer and staying healthier.

</description>
			<category>News - BC</category>
			<pubDate>Sun, 03 Jun 2007 01:00:00 +0100</pubDate>
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			<title>Mandatory Retirement Elimination Act Becomes Law - May 31, 2007</title>
			<link>http://www.abilitynotage.ca/index.php?option=com_content&amp;task=view&amp;id=140&amp;Itemid=2</link>
			<description>
Mandatory Retirement Elimination Act Becomes Law
CUFA/BC Wire


May 31, 2007


Despite indications last week that Bill 31 - Human 
Rights Code (Mandatory Retirement Elimination) Amendment Act, 2007 (http://www.leg.bc.ca/38th3rd/1st_read/gov31-1.htm)  - might 
not be adopted in the spring sitting of the BC Legislature, the bill today passed all the necessary stages and was given Royal Assent late 
this afternoon as one of the final acts of Legislature before the summer break. This means that on January 1, 2008 mandatory 
retirement will become illegal in British Columbia.


The passing of 
Bill 31 into law is the culmination of a year-long campaign by the 
Confederation of University Faculty Associations of British Columbia 
(CUFA/BC) to end mandatory retirement in the province. Operating under the 
campaign banner 65 Is An Age, Not An Expiry Date, the university faculty 
organization battled stereotypes about older workers and succeeded in persuading 
the public and the government that it was time for mandatory retirement to end.


CUFA/BC also assisted its member faculty associations 
at the University of British Columbia, University of Victoria and 
Simon Fraser University to achieve agreements with their administrations 
to immediately end mandatory retirement for faculty members at 
those institutions. These agreements mean that approximately 110 
faculty members at the three universities will have the choice whether or 
not to retire this year. That choice would not have been 
otherwise available to them under Bill 31. (Mandatory retirement does not 
exist at the University of Northern British Columbia or Royal Roads 
University.)


The CUFA/BC campaign website www.AbilityNotAge.ca (http://www.abilitynotage.ca)  will 
remain active until the new year in order to provide information to 
British Columbians about the transition to a world without 
mandatory retirement. It will also serve as a resource for individuals 
and groups in other provinces working to close loopholes that still 
allow mandatory retirement in some circumstances.

</description>
			<category>News - Campaign</category>
			<pubDate>Thu, 31 May 2007 01:00:00 +0100</pubDate>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title>Let's Not Make 'Mandatory' Either Staying or Going at 65 - May 10, 2007</title>
			<link>http://www.abilitynotage.ca/index.php?option=com_content&amp;task=view&amp;id=138&amp;Itemid=2</link>
			<description>
Let&amp;#39;s not make &amp;lsquo; mandatory&amp;#39; either staying or going at 65
Craig McInnes


Vancouver Sun
May 10, 2007

Note to boss: Don&amp;#39;t take this the wrong way. I
like my job. I get to talk to interesting people, there are no lumps of
coal falling on my head and I get paid to speak my mind, even when you
don&amp;#39;t like what I have to say.

Still, the news that British Columbia is following the lead of other
provinces by banning mandatory retirement does not immediately make my
heart leap with joy.

I grew up in the 1960s, when the expectation was that advances in
science and technology were going to allow us to work less and spend
more time in the pursuit of leisure.

So I have a deeply embedded sense that there is more to life than paid
work. Again, I&amp;#39;m not complaining, but my annual holidays are not long
enough to quench my thirst for the wider world.

My adult life has been divided into an early period when I had lots of
time to do what I wanted but no money, the scrambling years when our
kids were young and we had neither time nor money for much other than
the basics, and the sense I have now of having a little money to tick
off some of the things on my do- before- I- die list but not enough
time.

My dream of retirement is not a couch with my name on it, but a period
in which I will have both the time and the money to do as much as
possible before my body gives out.

But that&amp;#39;s just me. Somehow I don&amp;#39;t think the drafters of the bill
banning mandatory retirement tabled in the legislature last month had
me in mind.

But what were they thinking? There are essentially two groups lobbying
to increase the opportunities for people to work beyond what has been
in Canada since 1951 the   normal  retirement age of 65. That was the
year Ottawa brought in the legislation that has evolved into the Canada
Pension Plan and Old Age Security.

One group wants to keep on working past 65. That&amp;#39;s not illegal now, but
until the new legislation becomes law, employers can maintain policies
that force employees, such as university professors who have been among
the most active advocates for change, to retire when they reach that
age.

The law before the legislature would make such policies subject to the
Human Rights Act, which prohibits discrimination based on age.

</description>
			<category>News - BC</category>
			<pubDate>Thu, 10 May 2007 07:07:21 +0100</pubDate>
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