Workplace retaliation (also called “reprisal”) is when your employer punishes you for exercising your legal rights or reporting wrongdoing. It’s illegal in Ontario under multiple laws including the Employment Standards Act, Ontario Human Rights Code, and Occupational Health and Safety Act.
In simple terms: Your employer cannot fire, demote, threaten, or punish you for standing up for your workplace rights.
1. You're Likely Entitled to More Than the Minimum
You’re protected from retaliation when you:
- File a complaint about unpaid wages or overtime
- Report workplace harassment or discrimination
- Make a human rights complaint
- Refuse unsafe work
- Ask about your employment rights
- Take a protected leave (pregnancy, family medical, etc.)
- Report illegal activities (whistleblowing)
- Participate in union activities
- File a workplace injury claim (WSIB)
- Ask about equal pay for equal work
Signs of Retaliation at Work
Retaliation can be obvious or subtle. Watch for these warning signs:
Direct Retaliation
Termination:
- Being fired shortly after filing a complaint
- Sudden termination “for cause” after reporting harassment
- Being let go during or after protected leave
Demotion or Transfer:
- Losing your position or job title
- Being moved to a less desirable role, shift, or location
- Reassignment to menial tasks beneath your skill level
Financial Penalties:
- Pay cuts or reduced hours
- Denied raises, bonuses, or commissions you’re entitled to
- Loss of benefits or perks
Subtle Retaliation
Hostile Work Environment:
- Suddenly being excluded from meetings or projects
- Receiving the “cold shoulder” from management
- Being isolated from coworkers
- Increased criticism or micromanagement
Performance Issues:
- Negative performance reviews that don’t match your actual work
- Being written up for minor infractions previously ignored
- Unrealistic performance expectations designed to set you up for failure
- Excessive documentation of minor mistakes
Career Sabotage:
- Being passed over for promotions you would have received
- Denied training or professional development opportunities
- Removed from high-visibility projects
- Being left out of important communications
Intimidation:
- Threats about your job security
- Pressure to resign or retire early
- Bullying or aggressive behavior from supervisors
- Being told to drop your complaint or face consequences
Pattern of Retaliation
Sometimes retaliation isn’t one big action but a series of small incidents that create a toxic work environment. If you notice multiple negative changes after exercising your rights, you may be experiencing retaliation.
How to Prove Retaliation at Work
To prove retaliation, you need to establish a connection between your protected activity and your employer’s negative action. Here’s how:
1. Show You Engaged in Protected Activity
Document that you:
- Filed a complaint (ESA, human rights, safety)
- Reported harassment or discrimination
- Took a protected leave
- Asked about your rights
- Refused unsafe work
- Participated in union activities
Evidence needed:
- Copy of your complaint or report
- Emails or letters you sent to HR or management
- Dates when you exercised your rights
- Witness statements from colleagues who knew about your complaint
2. Prove Your Employer Took Adverse Action
Show that your employer punished you:
- Termination notice or record of dismissal
- Documentation of demotion, transfer, or schedule changes
- Proof of pay cuts or reduced hours
- Negative performance reviews
- Written warnings or disciplinary notices
Evidence needed:
- Termination letter
- Pay stubs showing reduced wages
- Performance reviews (before and after your complaint)
- Email or written communication showing the adverse action
3. Establish a Causal Connection
Prove the timing and circumstances link your protected activity to the punishment.
What strengthens your case:
- Timing: The adverse action happened shortly after your complaint (days, weeks, or a few months)
- Sudden change: Your employer’s behavior changed dramatically after you spoke up
- Pretext: The reason given for the action doesn’t make sense or is inconsistent
- Prior good standing: You had positive reviews and no issues before your complaint
- Direct statements: Your employer made comments linking the punishment to your complaint
Example: You filed a harassment complaint on Monday. On Friday, you were suddenly terminated “for performance issues” despite having received excellent reviews for three years. The timing and inconsistency suggest retaliation.
4. Document Everything
Keep meticulous records:
Before the Retaliation:
- Performance reviews showing good work
- Awards, recognition, or positive feedback
- Your employment contract
- Company policies and employee handbook
During and After:
- Dated notes of every incident (who, what, when, where)
- Emails, text messages, and written communications
- Witness names and contact information
- Photos or screenshots of relevant documents
- Medical records if stress caused health issues
Key tip: Write down conversations immediately after they happen, including exact quotes if possible.
How to Protect Yourself from Retaliation at Work
Before You File a Complaint
1. Know Your Rights Understand the laws that protect you:
- Employment Standards Act protections
- Human Rights Code protections
- Occupational Health and Safety Act protections
2. Document the Original Issue Keep evidence of the harassment, discrimination, unsafe conditions, or unpaid wages you’re reporting.
3. Review Company Policies Check your employee handbook for:
- Complaint procedures
- Anti-retaliation policies
- Grievance processes
4. Consult an Employment Lawyer Get legal advice before filing a complaint. A lawyer can:
- Assess your situation
- Advise on the best approach
- Help you document properly
- Protect your rights from the start
Many employment lawyers offer free consultations.
After Filing a Complaint
1. Continue Documenting Record everything that happens after your complaint:
- Changes in how you’re treated
- New policies applied to you
- Communications from management
- Witness observations
2. Maintain Professionalism
- Continue performing your job well
- Follow all reasonable instructions
- Don’t give your employer legitimate reasons for discipline
- Keep personal opinions about the situation off social media
3. Report Retaliation Immediately If you experience retaliation:
- Report it to HR in writing
- File an additional complaint if necessary
- Contact your union representative (if unionized)
- Inform the original agency where you filed (Ministry of Labour, Human Rights Tribunal, etc.)
4. Preserve Evidence
- Save work emails to a personal account
- Keep copies of all documents at home
- Back up electronic evidence
- Take photos of physical evidence
5. Seek Support
- Talk to trusted colleagues who can serve as witnesses
- Connect with mental health resources if needed
- Join employee support groups
- Stay in touch with your lawyer
What NOT to Do
Don’t resign without legal advice: Quitting can hurt your case and limit your options, even if you feel pushed out.
Don’t retaliate back: Stay professional even if your employer acts unprofessionally.
Don’t ignore the retaliation: Document and report it immediately—delay weakens your case.
Don’t discuss your case publicly: Avoid posting on social media or talking to too many people about the details.
Where to Report Retaliation at Work
Depending on what you reported originally, you have several options:
1. Ontario Ministry of Labour
Report if retaliation followed:
- Employment Standards Act complaint (unpaid wages, termination pay, etc.)
- Occupational health and safety complaint (unsafe work, workplace violence, harassment)
How to report:
- Phone: 1-800-531-5551
- Online: ontario.ca/employmentstandards
- In person: Visit a Ministry of Labour office
What happens: An employment standards officer or inspector investigates and can order remedies including reinstatement and compensation.
2. Ontario Labour Relations Board (OLRB)
Report if retaliation followed:
- Health and safety complaint under OHSA
- Union-related activities
How to report:
- Online: olrb.gov.on.ca
- Phone: 416-326-7500 or 1-877-339-3335
- Mail: 505 University Avenue, 2nd Floor, Toronto, ON M5G 2P1
What happens: The OLRB can mediate settlements or hold hearings and order reinstatement, compensation, or removal of penalties.
3. Human Rights Tribunal of Ontario (HRTO)
Report if retaliation followed:
- Human rights complaint about discrimination or harassment
- Filing a workplace accommodation request
How to report:
- Online: sjto.ca/hrto
- Phone: 416-326-1312 or 1-866-598-0322
- Mail: 15 Grosvenor Street, Ground Floor, Toronto, ON M7A 2G6
Filing deadline: Within 1 year of the last incident
What happens: The Tribunal investigates and can order remedies including compensation for injury to dignity, lost wages, and reinstatement.
4. File a Civil Lawsuit
If retaliation led to wrongful dismissal or constructive dismissal, you can sue your employer in court.
When to consider:
- You were fired or forced to quit due to retaliation
- You’re seeking damages beyond what tribunals can award
- Your case involves complex legal issues
How to proceed:
- Consult an employment lawyer immediately
- File a claim within 2 years of termination
- Your lawyer will negotiate or litigate on your behalf
5. Internal Reporting
Before going external, you may need to report internally:
Report to:
- Human Resources department
- Your manager’s supervisor
- Corporate ethics hotline
- Anonymous reporting system (if available)
Important: Keep copies of all internal reports. If your employer fails to address retaliation or retaliates further, you have documentation for external agencies.
Bottom Line
Key Takeaways:
- Retaliation is illegal – Ontario law protects you from punishment for exercising workplace rights
- Document everything – Keep detailed records before, during, and after filing complaints
- Timing matters – Retaliation often happens shortly after protected activity
- You have options – Report to the Ministry of Labour, HRTO, OLRB, or file a lawsuit
- Don’t resign without advice – Quitting can hurt your case even if you feel forced out
- Act quickly – Deadlines range from 90 days to 2 years depending on the type of complaint
- Get legal help – Employment lawyers can protect your rights and maximize your compensation
If you’ve experienced retaliation, you don’t have to accept it. Ontario law is on your side, and legal remedies are available to hold your employer accountable.